Remember that old Latin dictum: “Homo sum, humani nihil a me alienum puto?” In my case, there's one thing I do consider alien, and that's being afraid of the unknown, and especially of unknown, different people.
I'm reading a thread where someone is expressing their fear of a massive migration to Fedi from Twitter. It all feels xenophobic and egotistic. “I liked it when my world was just my own little bubble, but, with every expansion, it became less and less my own, and I hate that.”
Well, I don't. I like meeting new people, visting new places, listening to new languages and exposing myself to different points of view. And, yes, I still use the mute button more times than I'd care to count, because I'm also aware that 95% of everything is shit, but you have to expose yourself to it if you want to discover that 5% that's really worth it.
I despise people who are not open that way. You don't have to like everything (I certainly don't), but why would you preemptively close yourself to it? It feels narcissistic: “I have never left my tiny village, but it's obvious to me that there can be nothing better beyond its border walls.” Smol brain, if you ask me.
@josemanuel I think the recent concern might be that the latest mass migration might be filled with the kind of people that they don't want to see around.
So for them, instead of 95% of shit, it might be 99,99% of shit.
@trinsec That's the thing. Nobody forces anybody to see anybody around. Some people fear new people like the block and mute buttons didn't exist.
To my mind, using those when necessary is better than keeping others away by being passive-aggressive and then, when they leave disgusted or bored, nudging themselves and say: “See? We were right about them.”
@FailForward I may be wrong, but Parler was probably an FBI honeypot. That said, nobody is forced to interact with them or give them refuge if they break their instances' rules. As long as admins do their work properly, what's there to fear?
Furthermore, haven't we talked since forever about how the Fediverse is so resistant to censorship due to its decentralised nature?
To be honest, I think you make a very valid point, but what prompted me to write the first post was the reasoning behind their fear. They weren't worried about being censored or cancelled by association, but about the loss of their ‘culture,’ which is what made me realise they were being xenophobic. “They come to change our values, our traditions, our sense of humour, our memes.”