Subject: I'd support a ban. (cw: discussing the specific harm-to-animals topics)
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Posted on: 2020-05-25 20:13:32 UTC

General principles:

  1. The Constitutional points Delta Juliette raised apply in all PPC spaces.

  2. No means no; stop means stop. This shouldn't be difficult to understand.

  3. It is incumbent upon a newcomer to a private group to learn the group's ways and assimilate. The group is not required to accept anyone who can't or won't assimilate.

Personally: my experiences with SRPA have also been awkward or annoying.

It seems pretty clear after this much time that he can't or won't assimilate. If someone doesn't leave on their own when that's the case, it's right to ban them.

At the same time, though, I do want to caution us against possibly being a little too sensitive and imposing our personal values on others? This is basically an unconnected aside in that it doesn't bear on the question of whether or not SRPA should be banned and I don't feel any separate discussion is required. I feel the need to speak about this for my own personal reasons.

(cw applies below)

Context matters. In Korea, eating a live octopus is an admittedly extreme version of a normal food. If I kill a spider, I'm overcoming a phobia in order to deal with something that is causing me anxiety. That CAN be an accomplishment--not the killing, which I don't like and wouldn't boast about, but the overcoming of irrational fear. (OTOH, leaving the spider alive and putting it outside would be an even bigger accomplishment for me.) And, I think there's a big difference between the sort of dark humor that can encompass a cartoon cat doing something upsetting and anything at all to do with harm to a REAL cat (and I say this as someone with a lifelong Thing about cats in particular). If most of us agree that it's in poor taste, that's fine, but conflating cartoon violence with real violence is a mistake.

We don't all have the same values or sensitivities, and sometimes it's our responsibility to learn to cope with our unique sensitivities in a healthy way rather than to expect everyone around us to alter their everyday behavior so we don't have to learn to cope. I want to be sure we all bear this in mind.

(cw applies above)

ALL THAT SAID, I realize that my sense of foreboding about going too far with circling the wagons is a personal problem to a degree.

It IS responsible to ask for help dealing with our issues if we need it, and it's fair to expect reasonable requests to stop a specifically upsetting behavior to be respected. SRPA hasn't shown that basic respect; it is quite right for SRPA to be banned.

~Neshomeh

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