This question is a request for good practices for commenting and question-closing to implement Jay Hanlon's mission to be more
welcoming.
TL;DR
the internet is unwelcoming by definition
you cannot control the internalization of peoples thoughts and feelings about something that empirically has no thought or feeling associated with it, implicitly or explicitly.
never down vote, close vote, delete vote or comment whatsoever on anything ...
there is this saying about a baby and the bath water ...
This question illustrates that you can not control the thoughts and actions of anonymous users on the internet and implicitly indicts those that use the site the way the site has always been designed to work are guilty of implicit bias, against what? Everyone named user\d+
? Everyone with a geometric pattern as their avatar? Really?
If someone feels not welcomed because some stranger clicked an arrow
that is their problem, full stop.
Entitlement is the elephant in the room, not implicit bias.
I see a question, the problem is clearly someone comparing String
with ==
and I close vote it as the duplicate as it is. And move on.
Specifically what "implicit bias" am I guilty of if someone decides the feel "unwelcome" by that?
I propose a different perspective. I think they feel entitled to a customized answer that they can copy and paste and not think about and they did not get it so they feel offended/neglected/unserviced/????, who cares, we will never know, but they know that will not play so they scream unwelcomed over and over on meta that they did not get the customized answer for free that they were entitled to.
The only problem with implicit bias in this scenario is with the ones that ascribe malicious intentions to someone that clicked a arrow or link on a screen without a thought about the person behind the content, and thinking they are out to get you personally. I mean that is the mantra right? Vote on the question/answer not the user!.
How about the official response being to the unwelcome noise with that. Votes are based on the content, not you personally.
I never comment on down/close/delete votes ever. I never respond to
*downvoter explain!, they never want an explanation they want a name so they can attack. If that is unwelcoming then just remove the down
voting arrow, the close/delete vote link and be done with it.
If someone asks in a more thoughtful way they get an auto comment pointing them to the hover text on the down vote arrow and a link to a discussion the stackexchange meta site about how asking for explanations is counter productive. Anything else brings pain and misery and someone almost immediately breaking the Be Nice policy.
How you feel is because of you and no one else, how others feel is because of them and no one else.
You cannot control others thoughts and feelings about things that are completely based on their own implicit biases and internalizations.
So if down votes make someone feel unwelcome you will just have to remove the ability to down vote. Slippery slope ahead ... close votes, delete votes, ...
What about people that post comments asking for more information or a stacktrace, their implicit bias that someone writing code that should know what a stacktrace is offends many that do not know what a stacktrace is or just do not feel they need to provide anything else to get the free help they are entitled to.
So there goes comments, they can make people feel unwelcome, they have to go.
That blog post explicitly states that everyone that uses SO is guilty of making someone feel unwelcome and it is their fault because of their own because of some implicit bias.
Well that makes me feel unappreciated and unwelcome as well, did the guy think about that before he posted that, I think I need an apology and a retraction from him and he needs to think about what he writes more next time. Right?
I mean I am very progressive, and a member of a recently defined protected group myself, but I have to say, this is a classic case of, how open minded before your brain falls out?
I mean really, if thinking that how someone feels about a arrow being clicked on the internet is the entire communities and the company that runs the web site's fault, and that is what that the blog post that prompted this question explicitly states, that is going to be one big ass class action lawsuit for therapy services when someone supposedly kills themselves over a closed question.
The sad thing is when all those that contribute the free time and content to the site go away and stop playing the janitor what then? No amount of introspective blog posts is going to entice them back, hello W3Schools reputation.