Quote Originally Posted by Banriikku View Post
You are trolling and took what i said out of context to provoke. Cultural diffrence is used in the debate about the ToS and SE behavior regarding the community as a excuse to not discuss and disredgard arguments altogether. What you are refering to is a politcal theme i would not touch even with a 100 foot pole in a forum but what ever floats your boat, i guess.

My point is and was: The ToS should be a baseline to make social interactions possibel in a controlled matter not punishing like crazy or even cater to "trigger happy" people. Also we need interactions with the community but besides Yoshida's we dont get any and thats not enough.
I'm not trolling. Maybe you should explain it better if you have an issue with how people interpret your text. The context of your point was cultural differences are buzzwords. You are naive because cultures are innately different due to developing in isolation and then with a few groups that became a global community over time. Cultures are still unique in language, values, mannerisms, moral compass, ethics, law, etc. If it didn't happen that way, the world would be far easier to navigate.

You can't control social interaction because you arnt the one speaking. So what you are asking for is the ability to control thoughts or, if they have one you disagree with, stop them from talking altogether, which is malicious. Also, regulation doesnt make social interaction possible in this game. A pair of eyes a, brain and fingers do. If the game didn't have a ToS, social interaction would still be possible.

You prove my point by saying "crazy or even cater to "trigger happy" people" who gave you the right? Why is your opinion more important than theirs? You want to control who can speak. You are happily engaging in the theme you're saying you're not touching, whether or not you realise it.

Even though t's a video game, it has its politics. After all, you are engaging in something called a forum, and this is the town centre for the game, where members of the community come to converse, argue, and provide feedback to developers.