Vampyr, on 2013-February-21, 11:27, said:
For what possible reason?
I feel that the laws forums are overmoderated in this respect. These are not business meetings where we have an agenda that tells us what we discuss and nothing more (and even in business meetings it doesn't work like that). The discussions in the forums are discussions at a party or over a cup of coffee: They start about one subject and can morph into an interesting discussion about an other subject.
IMO the moderators should appreciate that a discussion about how -in the context of the topic at hand- the laws should be or how they should be interpreted is completely different from a proposal to change the laws. There is no reason to split a thread as soon as someone writes: "I think the law should mean..." or "I think the law should be". The fact that -in the opinion of the moderator- such a post could also have been written in the Changing Laws forum doesn't mean that it can't be written in the current discussion when it is relevant for both. Splitting threads has a very negative effect: it leaves us with two threads without context.
What I see here looks like a cooking forum with subforum about -among others- potatoes, pasta, rice, beef, porc, and ground beef. When someone starts a topic in the pasta forum asking for recipes for spaghetti I could post a nice recipe for spaghetti with meat balls. At that point the moderator interferes. The meat ball part belongs in the ground beef forum. The result is one thread that says: "Put the spaghetti in boiling water and take it out when the package says you need to take it out." and a thread in the ground beef forum about meat balls in tomato sauce (which IMO is about the worst way to serve meat balls - unless they are served with spaghetti - and I would never in my life post a recipe for meatballs in tomato sauce in a ground beef forum).
There is a reason why this discussion board is divided in a range of forums. And it is important that
when a topic is started it is started in the appropriate forum. But there is a reason for that: It is done to ensure that those who are potentially interested in the subject will see the topic and a nice discussion can start. If you want recipes for spaghetti, don't start a topic in the ground beef forum. And if you want a recipe for meat balls don't start a topic in the pasta forum.
In the case at hand we are not dealing with the start of a topic. We have a lively discussion with interested participants. This discussion is running its natural course and at some points touches on what the laws/regulations should be, rather than on what they are, all within the context of the original topic subject. That should be perfectly fine.
The fact that there also is a forum for changes to the laws is irrelevant. The topic wasn't started in that forum. The comments were not made with the aim to petition for a change in the regulations. (The posters are smart enough to find that forum if they want to.) They were written in the context of the discussion at hand. The effect of splitting the thread and moving some posts to another forum is that their context is removed, killing the meeaning of these posts. That should not be the aim of moderation.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg