Quote Originally Posted by Abriael View Post
"extreme opposing factions" is the definition. There arent really extreme opposing factions, as the vast majority of the posters of the theard don't have an extreme position as well. The ones wanting harsh penalties or no penalties at all are a very, very small number, compared to the bulk.

It seems that you're the one making your own definition.

People wanting light penalty *are* on my side, because I want a light penalty.

You sure like playing the victim. Sorry mate, I don't care that much about you. I care about avoiding people being misled, hence I gave people tools so that they can protect themselves from that, whoever it comes from.

And a personal summary of a few lines on a thread counting several pages would be more accurate?
Straight from Wikipedia: In politics, polarization (or polarization) is the process by which the public opinion divides and goes to the extremes. It can also refer to when the extreme factions of a political party gain dominance in a party. In either case moderate voices often lose power and influence as a consequence.

This is pretty much what he meant. Polarization is often used to refer to a split (like the poles), in general usage it really only means the positions are at extreme ends of the spectrum. The reset of his comment puts into into context that he didn't mean just two groups, pro-penalty and anti-penalty. The two of you should just leave each other alone and focus more on debate points, rather than each other.

As far as the link for the google translation goes...thank you for providing it, but I've tried using in the past (and I tried that link as well), but it's nearly unusable. I'm not surprised - I can't imagine that a direct latin-based to non-latin-based language translation is ever going to work well without human intervention to decipher context.