Subject: Suppose it depends what you'd use that on
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Posted on: 2017-05-14 22:55:00 UTC

Because I know that if there was a situation where I buggered up, got banned for a bit, and then came back, having apologised and accepted the blame and all, I certainly wouldn't want a tongue-in-cheek play about the whole bloody thing, and about how much of a big git I was through it!

I do get that reporting this stuff is important, and that you can't just sort of leave things lying around and pretend they never happened, but at the same time, I dunno - I just feel that the whole thing might be rather awkward, for the people who were actually involved in it. It's the sort of activity (from what I can figure about it, so far) that you'd need to ask permission for from the fellows involved (assuming they're still about, obviously), but then it's also an official report and response to community drama. Which is a somewhat odd mix, that.
Although I suppose I do support, in general, reports on those kinds of events, in order to take them apart and look at what broke and what went well, and how to avoid them? That, in general, sounds very useful, indeed, for newbies and such.

Anyhow, Tomash's mentioned a long sort of wait following incidents, and then them being written by neutral sources, which is a proposal I know I support, taking it away from the heated situation and all. Assuming this is a thing that happens.

I'm probably horrifically misunderstanding heaps of things, here, but them's the thoughts I got. I mean, I'd certainly be interested in seeing an example of one!
Gives a real good excuse to not go about getting banned, too, I suppose.

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