This post comes as a result of a little talk we had on GenZedong’s Matrix servers a couple of days ago and I thought it was a good idea to bring it as a proposal to discuss here.

There are some strange people in Lemmygrad. I bet you can think of one or two names when I say this. Honestly, I have nothing against it, I don’t think anyone should as long as they cause no harm, and quaint characters being attracted to on-line left wing spaces is as much of a natural law as that day follows the night so there’s nothing one can do even if they wanted anyway. However, one can tell by some behaviours that the strangeness of some of them come from being young. Too young. And I think it would be nice to limit our list of extravagant individuals to people with a somewhat developed prefrontal cortex, since I think that currently we have none of that.

As some of you may do too, I belong to the earliest sector of Gen Z. As such, it means that I was part of that experiment of giving unlimited access to the internet to someone from an early age, and after remembering well having seen that one video of a man and a glass jar after barely hitting a double digit age, I can say with some confidence that it was a bad move. While there is nothing as nearly as inappropiate as that going on here, I still consider that now that we are older and it is us the ones who are in charge of something, it would be for the best if we did what we could to prevent the youngest ones from wasting their years of brain plasticity on Hoxha-themed soyjaks, anti-psychiatry drama and debates about whether or not the Shining Path was “giga-based” or “turbo-cringe” amongst other brainrot instead of playing Poptropica on coolmathgames dot com or, even better, away from the internet.

My proposal is to set the minimum age for a Lemmygrad account at 16. Of course we can’t go around asking for IDs, but I think it would be sensible to put a message stating one must be 16 or older to join in the registration page, make it part of our rules and if someone’s behaviour seems sussy then let the mods and admins decide according to their collective judgement.

That’s it. Discuss.

Edit: Because some people seem to be missing the point - I know there is no way to enforce thia for all cases. But in the state things are right now, if some kid openly states that they are 12 they would not be able to be banned because there are no rules that justify it, which is no bueno.

  • OrnluWolfjarl
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    4 months ago

    I don’t think that’s a good move:

    1. Nobody will heed the warning and there’s no way to enforce it.

    2. Banning someone for something as arbitrary as their age (which they can do nothing about) is how internet communities end up dying. Plus, these kinds of rules not only turn people away from the community, they actually end up making the community worse, due to the mods policing with more vigilance.

    3. There are many alternatives to lemmygrad, especially on reddit. If a teenager wants to join a communist space, then let them do so in one that is good and well-managed.

    4. (related to the above) If we ban someone for being too young, there’s a very good possibility they’ll end up in some reactionary space, where the idea that communism is bad will be reinforced in their minds. Once again, let them spend time here than elsewhere.

    Yeah, I agree, access to the internet from a young age is a problem. But it’s a problem that primarily parents should deal with, and not lone communist internet communities with 500 users.