| ▲ | swed420 9 hours ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
No. Pre-Musk twitter was a liberal cesspool (and now it's a conservative one). Most of those liberals jumped ship to Bluesky. Again, that's not to say lefists don't exist, but they are a tiny fraction, and always were a tiny fraction no matter what platform. Don't rule out bots that exist in numbers to make the actual left appear like a deranged spectacle as a form of controlled opposition. Both parties of capital interests have a role in and benefit from these. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | frumplestlatz 7 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
The issue isn’t whether “the far left” exists in large numbers in the abstract; it’s how platform design, moderation norms, and social incentives shape which views are amplified -- and which are penalized. On Bluesky, the boundaries of acceptable discourse are unusually narrow and strongly enforced, which predictably produces ideological clustering. As for bots or “controlled opposition”: you don’t need conspiracy theories to explain why a heavily moderated platform with explicit cultural norms converges on a particular worldview. I’m disinclined to apply anything beyond Occam’s razor when accounting for “deranged spectacle” behavior; ordinary selection effects are sufficient. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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