lobosloboslobos wrote:mrdressup wrote:
I do dislike cultish behavior. I dislike factions and I typically will place myself outside of them if they are about "us" versus "them". I particularly dislike the idea that we are one great big happy family. We are here in a hyper-object behaving like an integral part of it. The hyper-object will persist no matter who is here typing. It would be a mistake to think that we owe anything to it. I is here to exploit the fact that each one of us is an observer where eyes have the means to secure revenues.
Hey mrdressup, although I recently challenged what I perceive as your intense and almost at times sociopathic negativity, I do appreciate this latest articulation of your unique outlook on this shared virtual space we inhabit called the Raptors board. In an earlier post you talked about us 'not owing the players anything' because they are 'unfeeling 'robots' whose only job is to drive consumer spending. Now say 'you dislike cultish behaviour' and since there are few activities so deeply rooted in cultish tribalism as sports fandom, I find myself wondering how exactly you conceive your meta-fandom? Why are you here? Why do you bother slumming it here in the cesspools of cultish fandom? And how do you operate in the rest of your life as an atomic outsider so unwilling to accept the validity of so many human relationships? I mean, I'm a pretty intense outsider myself, not a joiner by any means, but I have also gradually learned the value of authentic community, and how to create meaningful connections across all kinds of divides. It seems like that last bit is maybe lost in your hyperobjectified vision of the present, and of RealGM, deeply flawed and minimally self-aware though it certainly is.
We have the possibility to exploit what is at our disposal to provide us with something that has some degree of utility. RealGM is not likely to be perceived to be flawed if you are using it only for entertainment purposes. I would assume that this is the carrot that moves people to train their eyes here repeatedly.
If you must know more, I spend a lot of my day reading. That's just where I am in my life during the Winter. I am only physically active seasonally (I have a seasonal work schedule that maps very closely to the basketball season). This is a place I will visit on a daily basis. It's certainly not the only one. Basketball doesn't represent much of the time I spend entertaining myself. It is the thing that I consume that has the largest emotional triggers. I don't watch movies and don't read fiction. If you are asking why that is I will restate that this occurs because of mimetic mechanisms that I am sucked up by. There's a wave of emotion to sport that one can get caught up in. We borrow the energy of others and feed off of it. If the entertainment medium wasn't so great at producing that it would not float as a business. People tune in to be played by basketball, not to play basketball. I don't use it to feed a feeling that I belong to a family of like minded stans. You can also do the meta-basketball thing and be played by the basketball commentary game. It works perfectly well to serve the ball and have the serve be returned.
During the past 2 days I've started being misquoted and singled out for saying things that I have never said in a mimetic game of signaling out Barnes "haters" and piling on. This is all too common now. I attribute it to the Pensare Basketball phenomenon where some tune in and experience that person's neuroticism and overt scapegoating. That individual does it to recruit an audience mimetically, but it is being picked up as acceptable behavior, clearly.
I categorically reject the idea that I am a hater, whatever that means. Being critical is my overall game. Offering criticism is what I instinctively do when I encounter any overt suggestion that seeks to put beliefs in place (be they political or philosophical). If this place was overly negative I suspect that I would often react like a devil's advocate and criticize the effort. Despite what many would want to suggest that's not what this RealGM board is. It's not mainly negative. It's overly cultish in the sense of being a cult of personalities (Barnes being the obvious object of that now). I've been invited to "get out of here" by members of the "you are with us or against us" crowd. Who doesn't understand where that comes from? It is the most basic strategy in mimetic faction building games. One can object to being scapegoated as the face of a problem, or do what else? "Conform or be cast out" as Rush would have you sing to? Yeah, no. No one has to live in that sort of rulial space. Keep in mind that calling someone a moron here is not acceptable (it's a rule), but being made the object of a fake news campaign is not evidence of the transgressing any any rules. That tells you a lot about how the board itself is being formed by the propagandists here. It wants to recruit too. It feels it must cater to the mob, presumably. I'm not exaggerating when I say that it is getting increasingly difficult to see the positive in Barnes' contributions, because he has been turned into the object of cultish adoration.
I "get" that kids are ripe for falling prey to this stuff. Suggestibility is highest in youth and among simpletons. I can live with that. I reserve the right to get in front of attempts to have me be the problem. The problem is that there is no "your are with us or against us" rationale to live by outside of the mob. I don't feel that applies to me or you. For the record, I feel that Masai's interaction with the fanbase has been to stoke this sort of childish loyalty. This would certainly please his bosses. "We the North" was a business slogan that is heavy on recruiting everyone into a mimetically programmed faction that serves the business of basketball in Canada. An interesting way to play the game is to take from that in a way that has no cost to you. This is not what is desired in the glass towers.