If someone cares so much this mod was removed, I am immediately suspicious of that person.
It becomes a question of "How does this benefit you?"
You've taken all this time saying "Moderators shouldn't care", but then you twist it by saying somebody cares. So why shouldn't the moderators care?
it's either a silly mod nobody should care about, or it isn't. You can't play both sides to weasel the argument you want.
Yet you care so much about it. Any other "silly" mods you saw pulled today, or just the potentially racist one?
Advertisers are the best at spreading word.
It's probably why award shows (which are also smothered with ads) get so much publicity.
I don't want bat credit card and ice puns either. It's good for a laugh, but only because of how bad it is.
Just make Batman serious without making him unnecessarily edgy. We don't need to psychoanalyze every little thing interesting about him until it's not interesting anymore, especially not in the first movie. Leave the viewers to fill in some blanks.
The Arkham games were a great example that you can have a serious batman and still have a silly but dangerous Joker. And all they did was ramp up the actually good cartoon series that is still better than the movies.
To be fair, only a handful of publishers were able to take their cards and go elsewhere. The media companies were a lot more on top of dragging their products off of Netflix.
Nobody would be on steam just for Valve games, after all, and indie has a much lower barrier of entry.
While they could certainly distribute their current products better, a lot of the issues they have now (see: belated frogs comment) aren't things they really had control over.
Are these cases required to go to a state court before they're presented federally?
While it's good to know, It feels like it's not relevant whether an individual state's courts argue it, since foreign policy has to be handled on a federal level.
edit: I'm actually confused. It's a federal court in California? what sway does it have typically?
It's probably because I generally saw the sub shutdowns as a result of the protest, and not as an ongoing protest. Reddit clearly wasn't in any talks with the mods at that point and vica versa.
Honestly i'll just go with it being months. I'm basically just arguing semantics at this point.
I mean, I remember it being weeks myself.
But it's not as if things went back to the way they were either. There were definitely effects due to those weeks.
@AnonTwo
@kbin.social