Ever since I started this site five and a half years ago, I’ve struggled with the issue of what to do about public comments. I used to allow them — because it seemed like the obvious thing which almost every website does — but I was frustrated with the level of discourse.
I’ve had many interesting and useful comments from people — not all of which I even agree with, but which I found useful to the discussion — but a ridiculous percentage of comments have come from angry people who are simply anonymous cowards causing trouble by screaming at people on the Internet.
Some of the worst offenders have been people I’ve generally liked and even agreed with, but something about anonymous online commenting leads a lot of people to become nasty in ways they’d never be in real life.
For a long time, I put up with that, thinking it was a tradeoff I was willing to make. I slowly became more and more uncomfortable with that tradeoff, though.
Since I’m rarely writing about politics these days, my articles don’t attract the fairly regular vitriol they once did, but I’ve simply reached the point I’m not willing to tolerate any of it. (And, of course, I have also spent a ridiculous amount of time deleting spam comments which you guys have never even seen.)
When we’re scared of real love, we can panic if someone loves us
There’s magic in the dark solitude and quiet stillness after midnight
Bernanke: Recovery ‘faltering,’ so let’s do more of what hasn’t worked
Living a sane and healthy life is now radical by world’s standards
Fear of potential loss is a terrible reason to stay in the wrong place
Going through old relics tells me I’m still same person I used to be
Search for ‘more’ can leave us craving what we haven’t found
Don’t complain about debt when you borrow $35,000 to study puppetry
Pop culture creates overgrown kids in adult bodies who won’t grow up