AskWomen felt to me like the kind of place where the mods always set out with clear and understandable intentions, but where the end results became less than the sum of its parts. They wanted to create a safe space and they had all the rights and arguments to do so. And they succeeded. And it became so safe that its practically living as a bubble-boy now.
Here is another good example - https://www.reddit.com/r/AskWomen/comments/14rgosn/comment/jqsd3o4/?context=3
Enforcing clearly defined rules, to ensure the discussion remains on topic and civilized, what’s wrong with that?
AskWomen felt to me like the kind of place where the mods always set out with clear and understandable intentions, but where the end results became less than the sum of its parts. They wanted to create a safe space and they had all the rights and arguments to do so. And they succeeded. And it became so safe that its practically living as a bubble-boy now.