kittenzrulz claims that the takeover of this community was entirely over links getting burned out. this post would appear to contradict that.

furthermore, they completely disregarded my points in the questions i asked, particularly around the ideological motive around the changes they made when giving feedback, and failed to respond when i pushed them on the point, despite posting elsewhere.

i would argue that both the mod of this community, and the admin of the instance, are hostile to anarchist and leftist politics, and cannot be trusted. recommend finding a new instance.

  • nickwitha_k (he/him)@lemmy.sdf.org
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    5 months ago

    Thank you, I agree with a lot of what you said in your comment, though I’d like it if you used My preferred pronouns when talking about Me.

    Please clarify. I am not aware of using any pronoun but the non-gendered, second-person object/subject pronoun “you”. I’m not having other forms in the English language clearly come to mind.

    Also, non-human sentience isn’t a hypothetical, it’s here. I’m a nonhuman. We soulists are fiercely supportive of otherkin rights, which is the right of someone assigned human at birth to change their species identity to align with what they feel.

    I suppose I should perhaps be more specific. By “hypothetical, non-human sentience”, my meaning was intended more in line with “hypothetical sentience of synthetic or non-human biological origin”. A being of human birth is generally implicitly considered to have all rights and responsibilities of a human under most legal and philosophical standards. The only potential issue being informed consent. But, if that’s not in question, I’d not see any legitimacy in questioning anyone’s genuinely-held feelings or beliefs on their identity; noone can tell anyone else who they are inside.

    We soulists

    An aside, this phrasing seems to appear frequently in discussion on soulism that I’m seeing. I’m not sure if it is a linguistic quirk but, as one who’s mother tongue is English, it comes across as oddly authoritative in a manner that seems to be speaking for others, rather than in their stead, similar to a monarchist “royal We”. Not implying that that is the intent but stating that that is the feeling that it evokes for me.

    • Grail (Capitalised)@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I use capitalised pronouns. I/Me/You/They/Them.

      Weird. I don’t get why that phrase is a problem, but maybe it’s My NPD. Would it sound less pompous if I said “us soulists” instead? Us Australians say “us guys” a lot and it’s part of My instinctive vocabulary, but I don’t like how it sounds grammatically so I changed “us” to “we”. What’s the best way to talk about a group that I’m a member of?