Comment by petersellers

2 days ago

> To me all those mean the same thing, except the latter is more flavorful and makes my eyes less likely to glaze over.

And to many others, the difference is that one is informative, the other is likely to turn them off of the author and project forever.

I noticed that you never answered my question. If this is acceptable to you, where do you draw the line? If you can answer that question, maybe you'll be able to see the flaw in your argument.

> the other is likely to turn them off of the author and project forever

Which is absolutely fine. It's their project, their website. If they can't be colorful on their own website, where else can they be! If it turns off some people, I'm sure the author is aware of the risk and happy with that risk.

I, for one, find this kind of colorful language refreshing. Everyone trying to be politically correct makes the internet a dull place.

  • not being an asshole != political correctness

    Surely you have your own line on what is or is not acceptable discourse. What is it?

    • > Surely you have your own line on what is or is not acceptable discourse. What is it?

      I do but I decline to share it here. I'm not going to shift this thread from what the author is doing on their website to my personal beliefs and boundaries!

      All I am saying is it is their project, their blog. They can be however much rude they want to be on their website. It's their website, their lines and their boundaries. Where I set my boundaries has no bearing on what Andrew should write on their website.

      If Andrew alienates people by his writing, it's his decision, his action, his consequences that he has to deal with. How does it matter where I draw the line?

      14 replies →