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I'll give you an example:
There was a thread that called Obama's foreign policy approach towards Netanyahu "sissy" --it very clearly called his approach that word and did not Obama a "sissy". Even the locking message from the moderator said the reason was the way Obama's *policy* was characterized.
About the same time, there was a thread about a rather weird incident involving that riskee' female "reporter" in the locker room. The thread posed the question and was largely about whether a woman "invited sexual harassment" based on what she wears. It was not locked.
As i understand it, to lock a thread requires consensus of some sort and what seems to have happened was that the moderators were able to agree that it was not okay to call Obama's policy "sissy" but they could not agree that it was inappropriate to have a thread that speculates that women could invite an illegal activity. While the Brazilian reporter story was an oddball, the topic as presented was sexist in that it posed that one could invite an illegal activity.
But the point overall is that for whatever reason, a word about a policy got a thread locked and a thread noted by a number of people to be sexist was not --in fact, it was moved to the sports forum.
Why is it appropriate to lock a thread that calls a policy an ill-advised word and not appropriate to lock a thread that numerous people think is sexist? Also, does the requirement for consensus mean that men who are moderators can veto whether a thread is locked on the basis of being sexist...or white moderators can veto whether a post is locked because it's seen as anti-black? And so forth?
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