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A couple of my meta posts have been sidetracked by a user who persistently attributes every question to a fight between myself and another user.

What then happens, because this user has a huge following, everyone jumps on the bandwagon and gets sidetracked from the question I am asking. To the extent that my question stops being addressed on its merits alone.

Here are some of the comments (they don't read better in context, either):

Exhibit 1

[...] Is there any chance for this nonsense to stop or does it take having one of you give up and not come back?

Exhibit 2

[...] There is something going on between you and another hi-rep [python] contributor, having that spill over into meta like this is not productive. Learn to live with each other, be tolerant.

Flagging doesn't work, they are persistently declined.

I am on good terms with the other user. Like we all do, we may disagree on specific issues.

How can I ask a question without it being manipulated into a perceived war with another user?

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    @Jean-FrançoisFabre, My problem is as soon as he comments, my original question becomes irrelevant. That's a problem.
    – jpp
    Apr 11, 2018 at 18:34
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    Exhibit 2 is most definitely not rude and abusive. What did you explain with it in your "In need of mod" flag? Not constructive/no longer needed I would argue, but there's nothing "Rude and abusive" in either of your quotes (or the original comments)
    – Kendra
    Apr 11, 2018 at 18:42
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    Just tell who it is? Hans?, if that is the case you need to find an equilibrium between listening and just ignoring. He is part of the meta feature (mods tend to decline on meta). Apr 11, 2018 at 18:46
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    @Kendra The first comment doesn't seem to fall in line with "Be Nice". In my opinion it is rude, belittling, and very unwelcoming. Apr 11, 2018 at 18:46
  • 20
    @jpp You've got your causality reversed. People aren't supporting Hans because of who he is and because they adore him personally, but rather Hans simply understands the sentiment that many of the active users here feel. Your assertion that he's following you personally seems...unlikely, at the very least. He, and many others, are simply active users on meta, and regularly follow most questions posted in general, not just yours.
    – Servy
    Apr 11, 2018 at 18:55
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    @Servy, If that's true, he should address the question, not me. As soon as he attributes a hidden agenda, that hidden agenda is perceived as gospel.
    – jpp
    Apr 11, 2018 at 18:56
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    @jpp I don't see how he isn't. Again, you're just assuming, without basis, that everyone who is agreeing with him is doing so because he has a lot of rep, and not because they actually agree with him (or because he has a good understanding of what many of the users here feel). Yes, it's a lot easier to just dismiss someone's arguments by saying that everyone who agrees with them must being doing so because they just like him; it's a lot harder to consider the possibility that all of those people actually feel the same way. But it's more productive for you to assume the latter.
    – Servy
    Apr 11, 2018 at 18:56
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    @Servy lets be honest you and Hans are tough on meta, it's not easy when you start. Some of us learn to live with you others feel you are very intimidating. It's true you have tons of knowledge, but this meta shows a problem of how you share this knowledge with new users.. Apr 11, 2018 at 19:01
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    @Servy what you have a problem with is me stating a few facts no I have no problem with this and can't see how this is related to my comment, I was expressing another concern, but never-mind. Apr 11, 2018 at 19:18
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    Using the 'Be nice' policy as a sword instead of a shield devalues it, just as labeling a disagreement 'bullying' devalues real cyber-bullying:( If anyone actually believes they are being bullied, they should talk to a lawyer. Really, it's meta - who cares? I get beat up on meta often, so what - I've still got beer in the fridge. Apr 11, 2018 at 20:16
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    Are you seriously accusing Hans of bullying? He will be proud...
    – rene
    Apr 11, 2018 at 20:25
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    @jpp: I find the way how you present the first exhibit here very problematic. This is not the full comment and makes it look as if this user left just that text. Full comment is "The OP is not "gone", he visited the site 16 hours ago. Perhaps unimpressed with the answer, him seeing hi-rep SO users that don't like each other messing with his question can't impress him all that much either. Is there any chance for this nonsense to stop or does it take having one of you give up and not come back?". Quoting only the last sentence and then claiming that your question wasn't addressed is a problem.
    – BDL
    Apr 11, 2018 at 20:27
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    @jpp: I disagree about this. Pointing out that you have an edit war on your example question is very important if you want us to discuss questions and policies. That should really have been part of your question because atm it looks as if you came to meta to find others agreeing with you in order to win a fight. I might have written the comment a bit different, but the content is absolutely relevant.
    – BDL
    Apr 11, 2018 at 20:31
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    @jpp Providing relevant facts to support your statements doesn't make your comments worse. We want people to be supporting their statements with facts and evidence. That you consistently don't is a problem.
    – Servy
    Apr 11, 2018 at 20:43
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    @PetterFriberg although you're free to qualify Hans and Servy how you like and seeing how much support your comment got, let me state that we can't do without them. We need (meta) users that keep a clear mind, know their facts and don't mind voicing their doubts. If their resistance is removed or silenced we end-up with a site that is riddled with out of control bots and voting mobs that operate from chat rooms. You don't have to agree with them but their points of view are always worth considering. Don't make the mistake to use these kind of incidents to make them behave like you see fit.
    – rene
    Apr 11, 2018 at 21:35

3 Answers 3

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Your flags.

Two mods handled these particular flags and I was one of them.

This second one you flagged with a "rude or abusive" flag and I handled this.

enter image description here

When I reviewed it I considered a few things.
- Is it rude or abusive?
- It's on meta and meta lends itself for expression of opinions. As long as no one is being actively insulted, people are allowed to have opinion and express their opinions.
- He's not being abusive. He's stating what he sees as a fact, it's blunt, but telling people to be tolerant of one another is basically good advice. As to the truth of the claim between you and another user, I didn't want to remove it, rather allow the community to make up their own mind.

The first comment you linked I deleted just now.

This one you used a custom flag.

enter image description here

Saying that one of you may have to leave the site is not nice and we don't tell people to get lost, in any form.

If you have a problem with another user that you cannot resolve, create a custom mod flag describing the problem or contact the community team using the contact us link. Flag, ignore, move on.

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    But that comment isn't telling them to get lost. It's telling them to stop an edit war because the only way the edit war is going to end is if someone just leaves it alone.
    – Servy
    Apr 11, 2018 at 21:01
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    Hans is not saying someone has to leave, he is saying one of you give up and not come back which I read as: we will lose one valuable contributor. Hans want it to stop, for the better of both of them. Instead you honor the flag of a user which to me seem to have their own agenda. Despite all comments on the question, I think Hans is valuable with his often opposing views and having him silenced in this way is not good. The comment needs to be undeleted.
    – rene
    Apr 11, 2018 at 21:02
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    I handled each flag under it's own merit. Whatever agendas people have - I'm staying out of that. That is why I left the first comment - you can all discuss it, but just be nice. If there's roll back wars and disputes on the main site, flag it, and we will deal with it there.
    – user3956566
    Apr 11, 2018 at 21:07
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    I don't see what merits deletion of the second comment. That comment is not expressing what you state as the reason to delete it. So unless there are other pressing reasons you haven't shared yet, the comment is deleted in error by a moderator.
    – rene
    Apr 11, 2018 at 21:13
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    @rene I'm not revealing the details of the custom flag, I thought it was reasonable and deleted it. I've discussed it with another mod and we both thought it should go.
    – user3956566
    Apr 11, 2018 at 21:17
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    @YvetteColomb If the comment was deleted for reasons you can't share, then at least say that, rather than saying it was deleted for telling people to leave the site, when the comment was doing the exact opposite and trying to prevent people from leaving the site.
    – Servy
    Apr 11, 2018 at 21:19
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    Though the comment itself could lend a hand to baiting so I can at least see why it would be removed.
    – Bugs
    Apr 11, 2018 at 21:25
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    i mean, to be fair, neither of those comments are asking for or providing clarification of the question, so them being deleted isn't really outside of the realm of possibility regardless of whether or not either was rude.
    – Kevin B
    Apr 11, 2018 at 21:42
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    Two observations: (1) Other posts / comments have it the other way round, the first is more offensive, (2) Both these comments are highly upvoted by Meta users. At a minimum, there is a disconnect with moderation and what is considered reasonable. We all need educating.
    – jpp
    Apr 11, 2018 at 22:01
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    @jpp if you count yourself in all we gained at least something.
    – rene
    Apr 11, 2018 at 22:23
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    I do, indeed, in good faith. I hope you would also agree with my comment. It's a little disappointing another comment on one of these posts by a different Meta-guru had to be removed for being rude.
    – jpp
    Apr 11, 2018 at 22:25
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    it is unfortunate that we keep having to be petty :)
    – Kevin B
    Apr 11, 2018 at 22:32
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    No, that by itself isn't @jpp but publicly announcing your success with it to show off how "good" you are is. And stop calling me a meta-guru.
    – rene
    Apr 11, 2018 at 22:47
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    @rene, If you think my comment is rude, the correct action is to flag.
    – jpp
    Apr 11, 2018 at 22:56
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    I sure will, I don't need encouragement for that @jpp but thanks.
    – rene
    Apr 11, 2018 at 23:03
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How can I ask a question without it being manipulated into a perceived war with another user?

Short answer: You don't.

Longer answer:

If someone wants to see a rat where you're presenting a ladybug, you're unlikely to convince them otherwise. Don't bother trying. So long as they don't take the question off-topic, you might as well ignore their comment about "wars" with other users.

Now, if it does derail the comments, okay, you have a problem. But that has two possible fixes:

  1. You can edit your question to clarify that it has nothing to do with whatever the comments are carrying on about, then flag the offending off-topic comments and explain to a mod that they are not relevant to the question. They are not needed for the post to continue, and they do not critique or request clarification.

  2. You can also, with or without doing the previous (though I find it works better with) ask in the comments for the off-topic comments to end, and point out that it has nothing to do with your question. This is almost always easier if your question has been clarified, but sometimes the comments are so wildly off that you really shouldn't have to clarify. If the comments continue, you can usually flag for a mod to clean up the off-topic comments or remind folks that the comments are for critique/clarification, not for off-topic discussion. (This could even happen without a flag, if a mod wanders by and notices.)

As for persistent bullying, if someone is actually bullying you, definitely flag and explain to a mod. Link to examples, as best you can. But keep in mind that someone showing up on multiple posts you've made in a community with a small number of active users doesn't mean they are bullying you, even if you disagree with their comments or they read too much into your question. Remember that just because they're wrong/off-topic does not mean they are bullying you, it means they are wrong/off-topic.

Nothing you've linked to or shown us so far has come across as more than a misinterpretation, off-topic comments, or just a clarification or critique of the post. They are blunt, sure, but not everyone (indeed, it seems to me like a majority of the Meta community fits this, from my experience) would see this as rude. Some will, sure, but some will also see me saying "I'm a cat person" as rude.

Just for completeness, this is the full extent of each comment. Yes, this context does matter:

Comment 1:

The OP is not "gone", he visited the site 16 hours ago. Perhaps unimpressed with the answer, him seeing hi-rep SO users that don't like each other messing with his question can't impress him all that much either. Is there any chance for this nonsense to stop or does it take having one of you give up and not come back?

This was indeed an attempt to critique/clarify your question. It was blunt, sure. Perhaps a tad harsh. Rude? Not what I would call rude, no. Bullying? Most certainly not. I see nothing wrong with this comment. Could it have been worded differently so that it did not come across so bluntly or harshly? Most certainly. Most comments on the sites (all of them, not just Meta) can be. That does not make them rude, however.

They do not attack you. They do not act like you are stupid, they do not curse or insult anyone. They are blunt. The "nonsense" comment is, to my reading and the reading of at least a couple others in the comments above, in reference to the blooming edit war on the post you linked to in that question. The user has definitely seen pointless edit wars, and indeed, some of them do go on until someone gives up and does not return to the post. Others go until a mod steps in. Could've been worded better, but I still do not see it as rude.

Comment 2:

A tag that is favorited by 75,500 users and 95,000 questions does not have an exposure problem. There is something going on between you and another hi-rep [python] contributor, having that spill over into meta like this is not productive. Learn to live with each other, be tolerant.

Yeah, I see no relevance between this comment and the question it was posted on. Perhaps they posted it to the wrong question, perhaps they misread the question... However, I still do not see it as rude (Being wrong, misreading things, and such are not rude and the comment still does not attack you in any way, shape, or form. They simply misunderstood. If misunderstanding was rude, I'd be offended every minute of every day by the people I work with.) and it most certainly did not derail your question. This was the only comment about this topic on the question.

Please remember that rudeness is highly subjective. As I said earlier in this answer, someone could very easily find "I'm a cat person" rude, and what am I supposed to do about that? Refrain from being a cat person? In the end, if the mods disagree that it is rude, the only thing you can do is raise a question on Meta about how you don't understand how it isn't rude, and people will either agree and you'll get an apology, or people will explain that they also don't find it as rude (as has happened here) and you'll have to decide how you want to take things from there.

In the end, if you feel like the "Be Nice" policy and its enforcement disagree? That's a completely different Meta post, and you're going to want more than two examples for sure if you want to prove it. A lot more than two.

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    Kendra: How many should find a comment offensive for a mod to consider it contravenes "Be Nice"? Are the above comments insufficient, or just because you find it relevant it's fine?
    – jpp
    Apr 11, 2018 at 19:52
  • upvote just for (H)answering this minefield. Apr 11, 2018 at 20:18
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    @Jean-FrançoisFabre I only deserve that upvote if said answer adaquetely hit the target of addressing the question and not the comment minefield, without blowing up too many mines in the process. :)
    – Kendra
    Apr 11, 2018 at 20:19
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    @jpp I must say that I dislike some that the comment present in question was not the whole actual comment, please next time present complete comment. I see how you feel it's a non nice comment, but presenting 1/2 comment is also not fair. Apr 11, 2018 at 20:24
  • Concerning the second comment: the first sentence is probably meant to rebut the second paragraph of the question. <speculation> The rest of it is likely a reference to this question posted the same day. As you can see from the first comment over there, Hans saw two users having a disagreement. When jpp asked a separate question on almost the same subject, Hans probably thought that jpp was trying to stir up support separately. </speculation> Apr 11, 2018 at 20:38
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    Also, to clarify what happened here, comment 1 was flagged 32 minutes before this question was asked, wasn't even seen by a moderator until after this question was asked, and was just deleted 15 minutes ago. The flag was marked as helpful, as was another "rude or offensive" comment flag on the same post. Meta flags aren't always handled as quickly as ones on SO, because we have to remember to check over here separately.
    – Brad Larson Mod
    Apr 11, 2018 at 20:45
  • The truth is I only found out about the earlier Meta later! And I have no problem with his Meta either. My "enemy" upvoted my Meta fyi.
    – jpp
    Apr 11, 2018 at 20:45
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    @Jpp you keep on acting as if you know who upvotes what... between the people who upvote hans comments and also downvote the questions, or who upvotes your meta posts... you have knowledge everyone else lacks.....
    – Patrice
    Apr 11, 2018 at 21:51
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I think the problem is that your meta questions leave out that there was a disagreement on the questions you link to. For example, in your latest question you say:

My idea is to add some version information (which is likely to be important to any answer) and possibly offer a bounty to encourage a good response.

This makes it sound like you wanted feedback before you did anything. However, when one goes to the question they discover that you've already made the change and had in fact applied the edit multiple times because someone else rolled your changes back.

It happens that occasionally there will be a meta question from a user complaining about someone else's behavior but it's soon discovered that they left out the part where they initially insulted the other person or that this is someone they've fought with before. By leaving out that this argument happened, this looks like the same sort of thing. You may have left it out because it wasn't relevant but it ends up looking like you left it out because you want to win the fight.

To avoid this in the future acknowledge that a disagreement happened up front. Something like, "I'm asking because I thought X was correct but another user pretty strongly it should be Y. I want to know what the community thinks in the general case so I can do the correct thing moving forward."

If you are on good terms with the other user then you could also ask them to participate in the meta discussion right when you open it.

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    The said user has told me he does not wish to participate on Meta. I am not surprised.
    – jpp
    Apr 11, 2018 at 20:23
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    Exactly this. And the question didn't get derailed at all. The first 4 comments are about what you describe here. The other 6 comments and the answer directly address your question.
    – BDL
    Apr 11, 2018 at 20:24
  • +1 for good intent. To avoid this in the future acknowledge that a disagreement happened up front. As our friends on Meta would say, "Do you really think that makes any difference? What world you living on?"
    – jpp
    Apr 12, 2018 at 1:33

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