Remix.run Logo
glimshe 3 hours ago

Hacker News has a silent majority that works tirelessly to keep this site relatively free of ads disguised as articles and political news. I hope it stays that way. I'm just completely tired of those political echo chamber articles, even when I happen to agree with them.

jackyinger 3 hours ago | parent | next [-]

What if there was a way for the “silent majority” (or something like it) to discuss political issues free of the impetus to polarization? Surely that would be a lot better than echo chambers.

Hackernews style apoliticism strikes me as wanting to chameleon to whatever side is perceived as winning the political game. I think it’s a nihilistic stance.

We need to be able to be political without the zealotry. Politics, of all things, is not a zero sum game.

nospice an hour ago | parent | next [-]

All my social media feeds are filled with political rage bait. Yes, tech is political, and yes, techies implicitly take sides; but I really don't need another source for all the political headlines of the day.

jackyinger 27 minutes ago | parent [-]

That is not what I’m talking about. I’m talking about escaping that.

I’m frustrated with how narrow of view people here are taking on politics.

Partisan politics has grown into a nasty oppositional quagmire.

But, Politics in general is defined as “The art or science of government or governing, especially the governing of a political entity, such as a nation, and the administration and control of its internal and external affairs.” From a duck duck go search. That is pretty broad.

Open your minds! There is more out there than you think.

AlexandrB 17 minutes ago | parent [-]

But Hacker News is full of "hackers" and computer science grads. Why would you expect to find nuanced discussion of governing here? I don't come to Hacker News for discussion of surgical procedures either because the surgeons are not on here.

This might be heresy, but a CS background doesn't make you an expert on government, governance, or politics. Just as politicians seem woefully uninformed on computer science topics. So a political discussion on Hacker News will naturally lean towards popular conceptions of politics: that is partisanship, slogans, and the other stuff that makes social media politics so toxic. "The art or science of government or governing, especially the governing of a political entity, such as a nation" is not going to enter the picture.

jackyinger 10 minutes ago | parent [-]

I guess I’m making the mistake of assuming others have taken a similar intellectual path as I have.

I’m an Elecrical and Computer Engineer (ECE) by schooling. But I did pay attention in my mandatory liberal arts class. I took a Political Philosophy course, and a 400 level History of US Foreign Policy, where I was the only non-history major.

People inevitably opine on government/politics. And because of that I think they should delve deeper. I think that delving deeper and having civil conversation are how we escape the toxic mess media currently dishes out.

ACCount37 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Politics is the mind killer.

A near-total ban on the whole thing is easier to implement and enforce than trying to make online discussions of politics not suck, when their natural state seems to be to suck big time.

Is it impossible to maintain a civilized discussion of hot topic political issues? No. But it's not a solved problem, or anywhere near. I respect the "keep the incendiary stuff off the front page" policy.

ryandrake 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

"No Politics on the front page" is itself a highly politically charged policy: One that favors the status quo and favors hiding wrongdoing. I wish HN users who want "no politics" would admit that they are just asking for a different kind of political bias from the site.

ThrowawayR2 14 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

That seems analogous like the "atheism is a religion" fallacy. No, not wanting to see politics in one very specific location is clearly not a political stance.

AlexandrB 13 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> I wish HN users who want "no politics" would admit that they are just asking for a different kind of political bias from the site.

I won't admit that, because it's not true. You saying that it's true doesn't make it so.

ACCount37 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I wish HN users who want HN to be about politics would be honest about simply wanting HN to be a political echo chamber of their preferred flavor, instead of hiding behind the flimsy excuses like "everything is political actually".

fzeroracer an hour ago | parent | next [-]

Does your same argument not also apply to people who want HN to be 'non-political'? Since just from your post history recently I can see that you've leapt into some particularly political posts of your own [1] [2]. I'm particularly open about what I believe and post in, but usually people that say they want something non-political actually indicates that they precisely want an echo chamber.

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46614467

[2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46419993

jackyinger 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I don’t think people actually want yet another echo chamber. Anyone who has been exercising even a modicum of critical thinking sees where echo chambers lead.

I think a forum where bad faith polarizers are downvoted and good faith open minded discussion is rewarded would go a long ways.

ACCount37 an hour ago | parent [-]

Do you understand the magnitude of the thing are you asking for?

Trying to maintain a civilized discussion about modern politics is like walking a tightrope. You can say "anyone who knows what a tightrope is sees that falling off it would be bad", and it's true, but, does saying that mean that you'll avoid the fall? The failure mode is extremely obvious but not at all easy to avoid.

If you don't have an intuition of "partisan politics are inherently corrosive to human minds", I suggest you get one. It's not impossible to have a civilized discussion of politics, but it is unlikely and unnatural and unstable. It's very, very, very hard to set up and maintain an environment like this in practice.

fpesce 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I wonder if the push for "no politics" is actually a consistent principle, or if it's just a reaction to how much the current news cycle challenges the community's comfort zone.

Someone should look at the flagging rates for political threads from 2012, 2018, and today. It would show whether our definition of a "distraction" is based on content quality, or if the appetite for "apoliticism" fluctuates depending on which side of the aisle holds the megaphone.

Has anyone done a sentiment analysis on flagging patterns versus administrative shifts? I suspect the "politics is a mind-killer" argument is a lot more popular when the headlines don't align with the reader's own worldview.

jackyinger 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

It seems to me you think of politics as being the politics of the sensationalist 24 hour news cycle. Sure, that is a mind killer.

But I encourage you to take a look at politics as a broader thing. Read some academic, foundational political philosophy works. Politics in its broad sense is inescapable. Better to know it and be an active participant than to leave it up to others.

ACCount37 3 hours ago | parent [-]

You start by allowing "politics as a broader thing", flash forward a year, then you notice that at any given time, at least 20% of the frontpage is occupied by people screeching their throats raw with some incendiary hyper-partisan rhetoric.

The failure mode is rather obvious, and also extremely hard to avoid in practice.

jackyinger 2 hours ago | parent [-]

You’ll note I never suggested that hackernews was the forum for this.

If that failure mode is inevitable in hackernews culture, what does that say about the quality of the technical & business content?

ACCount37 an hour ago | parent [-]

"If putting rat poison in the burgers would cause people to die, what does this say about the quality of the burgers?"

Very little.

I've been told most hackers are humans - not machines or some kind of alien species. So I fully expect hackers to have the flaws people tend to do.

Partisan politics have a nasty habit of capitalizing on human flaws, and bringing out the worst in people who engage deeply in them. Which, in online communities, can have a self-reinforcing effect.

jackyinger 37 minutes ago | parent [-]

I’m not talking about partisan politics.

Do some reading about political philosophy and you’ll see how terribly shallow partisan politics is, and how deep the foundations of politics are. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_philosophy

ACCount37 21 minutes ago | parent [-]

And yet we are talking about partisan politics. Because it's the lowest common denominator of politics. Because it's the failure mode.

You can say "not all politics are actively toxic to human minds" and point at 18th century philosophical works all day long, but we both know that 18th century philosophical works were never the concern.

fzeroracer 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

A 'near-total ban' would involve basically banning the entire site of HN, and also tends to expose the inherent hypocrisy in any platform attempting to be 'non-political'.

For example, HN had massive threads years ago dedicated to glazing everything Elon Musk did. Now, conveniently, any discussion of Elon Musk, Grok etc is now flagged and considered political as the winds have changed to be largely negative. Same goes for a lot of stuff people took for granted in tech, because now that stuff was made part of the system that makes our lives worse.

Imustaskforhelp 2 hours ago | parent [-]

Tech and finance have wedded to each other and finance has lobbied for politics so hard.

So I don't think that tech and politics can be seperated from each other and this shows why.

Earlier, I don't think that appreciating Elon Musk was considered political for the most part (well I read his biography and I thought he was just interesting guy) but his recent acts on twitter (I refuse to call it X) etc. just show how bubbly even I or people who read his biography were.

After some new reports on him, I feel much more in disdain of man than not. My cousin still glazes Elon tho.

I feel like there is some dunning kruger effect at play here. I read his biography -> I feel smart -> I say Elon's smart previously on HN -> elon acts dumb as mouse with ketamine fueled addiction -> but I supported Elon earlier -> most people don't want internal contradictions so they will try to justify it -> Gets into glazing elon -> Flags people who give genuine criticism of the guy now -> gets to the far alt right

I feel like the problem is more so the extremism.

There are some real issues happening in the world and news is covering it but some hackernews users definitely flag anything that they find not fitting in their world order.

I just want to say that its okay to have internal contradiction because we are all human and we can evaluate people wrongly. Doesn't mean we have to stick with that.

I remember watching pirates of silicon valley when I was in middle school (it was in a pendrive connected to TV so whenever satellite connection got lost, I used to watch it), I even went ahead in school and gave a speech on steve jobs, next and everything so much so that the teacher (he was a teacher for such extra activities started calling me steve jobs)

Anyways, my point is that it was only later in life where I realized that althoguh steve jobs was a good businessman, how valuable steve wozniak and other underrated people are and how ethically questionable xerox's decision was and his personal life too...

I just want to say that there is a nuance about steve jobs as well, he was pretty rude to his employees.

Like I feel like there is just nuance to the whole situation that people forget in HN

intended 2 minutes ago | parent | prev [-]

What you are asking for is … likely fundamentally impossible due to how the definitions and tech is set up.

There’s a certain physics to how communities end up behaving online. For example, in heterogenous communities, topics like Politics and Religion will always generate a high volume of flame wars, unless strongly moderated.

The underlying rule is that on topics with low barriers to entry, and no way to test accuracy or establish expertise, you cannot achieve fact based consensus effectively.

Since there are scant physical limits, online arguments can continue forever, creating a perfect engine for unending polarization and zealotry.

If you want to see actual discussion on this topic, it would require people to agree to certain rules of debate, which automatically will filter out a decent chunk of users.

RobotToaster an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

There's almost always some political post on the front page about China/EU/Russia bad. They only get removed if it's about America.

dfxm12 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

HN also has a hide feature. If you don't want to see something & have it replaced by the next story, you have agency here as well.

mrguyorama 24 minutes ago | parent | prev [-]

>silent majority that works tirelessly to keep this site relatively free of ads disguised as articles and political news.

And just like the other "Silent majority", this is utter tripe.

Every other submission is an ad FFS. Nobody is doing anything to remove ads. HN Itself is an ad.

It's not "Silent", as these people love nothing more than reminding you that topics they don't like are objectively "politics" and "Don't belong on HN" even though HN tried that once and it was terrible

And they aren't "Majority", because the flagging mechanism requires shockingly few flags before a post is knocked off the front page, and if anyone tries to plead any case in the comments, that also knocks it off the page, as a "flamewar", because apparently on a place that insists it is curating thoughtful discussion, high velocity discussion is impossible?

It's a heckler's veto is what it is.