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hubskier for: 3811 days
"A few nights ago, my 8-year-old woke up in the middle of the night screaming, “No, don’t kill him! You’re hurting my brother! Don’t kill him.”" How do police officers (or SWAT) deal with this? Sure they are doing their job, but have they become that detached that a flash bang in a babies crib is an acceptable incident on the "field" when searching for a young persons drugs? Who thought it was a good idea to use military flash bangs against civilians in the first place? Is this not all just breeding a generation of people who view their own government as tyrants?
Perhaps he means the "collective we".
By removing visible vote tallies, comments that have 1000 upvotes and 999 downvotes show the same value as a comment that has 2 upvotes and one downvote. To some it makes no difference, but for others being able to watch your votes up and down was all part of the fun. It certainly drew me to Reddit. It also breaks a lot of smaller subreddits routines like holding competitions that didnt take downvotes into effect. Personally I think it all smells a bit fishy. Officially its trying to fix a problem that never really existed (people being confused about fuzzed downvotes), but realistically it makes it a lot easier for promoted content to go unnoticed which leads some to believe Reddit will be benefiting financially from the change. I'd be fine with Reddit benefiting financially, but they need to be open about it, or at least make the changes optional for smaller subs.
I'm on the same boat. It isn't the imaginary numbers that matter at reddit, its the manner they went about a change that impacts the smaller subs. In a way I'm happy. It spurred me to explore new social aggregate alternatives, and so far I'm liking what I'm seeing.