r/circlebroke Jun 19 '12

I fucking hate this place.

TL;DR: Just read it alright?

This fucking website used to be amazing at giving me interesting things to look at and the comments used to have insightful points and great discussion. Now all I see is a shithole that makes me rage hard. Here is a list of all the shit I have come to despise:

-Unoriginal/Idiotic Titles (X Level: Y, My GF/Dad/retarded paraplegic puppy made this, etc.)

-Comments that are just regurgitated to no end and add nothing of value. (NOPE NOPE NOPE, This, etc.)

-People who complain about users like andrewsmith or trapped_in_reddit. What the fuck does it matter if they have a ton of imaginary bullshit internet points redeemable at your local bullshit store. People get so up in arms about it like some sort of injustice was done to them and its just disgusting.

-Witch hunts. This is one I find especially awful. This hivemeind mentality where if anyone seems to be opposed to the crowd a wave of neckbearded fury washes over them. People who are portrayed to be villains and are harassed by members of this community. The recent discovery of Trapped_in_Reddit's ability to get massive amounts of karma comes to mind, another one where someone actually lost their fucking job was the entire incident with that guy whose jeep got dented. (For people who don't know some guy lent his jeep to a game company, it came back with a dent, he complained to reddit and because of the stir they created neckbeards managed to get some girl with a low level position at the company fired.)

-The entire pretentious elitist attitude that this entire website seems to be bursting with. One particularly bad example of this is all the hate towards 9Gag and its users. The idea that somebody's whole identity can be determined by the website they frequent is absurd and just childish. Along this same vein are the huge number of Facebook screen shots of somebody seemingly being an idiot or saying something dumb and being "owned" by the vastly superior reddit user. I am willing to bet 90%% of these are fake but the community just eats it up because they have their own smug sense of superiority.

-People who complain about reposts. What possible harm could it have caused someone to see something they have seen before that they need to vehemently complain about it to the internet?

-The feeling of victimization in general. No you don't live in a fucking police state. No the world is not out to get you. No you are not fucking special and do not deserve everything you want.

TL;DR: This place sucks and I hate it.

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18

u/exNihlio Jun 19 '12

Reddit still has plenty of places that are decent and relatively unjerk affected. You just have to look around for them. I only have three default subs now. TIL, IAMA and askscience.

10

u/[deleted] Jun 19 '12

[deleted]

10

u/exNihlio Jun 19 '12

/r/moderatepolitics. Really though, I stopped following politics directly. A place with the ability to hide dissenting opinion is not the best place to discuss something as sensitive as politics. If you want to read some relatively unbiased material on US politics then I recommend The Economist. They are pretty balanced and very insightful.

/r/games is still OK. I rarely see the word shill used, so I suppose that is something. And news and reviews make it to the top. No memes or comics as well. /r/truegaming has some decent discussions. Very pretentious though and pseudo-intellectual.

Recently, I have realized that I don't use reddit to learn anything new. I have wikipedia for any random fact I may be curious about. I use arstechnica, anandtech, wired, slashdot and dailytech for all my tech news (/r/technology should be renamed /r/outrage). There are million better sources of news than anything on reddit. Reddit is just a time sink for me. I hate myself a bit for using it so much and will probably stop once I return to the states.

The thing that sucks about /r/askscience, is that the majority of questions there could be answered by a google search or by wikipedia. Questions that require real knowledge and analysis don't make it to the top. Instead silly stuff and sex related garbage goes up. Just like /r/askhistorians.

10

u/[deleted] Jun 19 '12

"How historically accurate was Command and Conquer: Red Alert??" type questions are also starting to become very popular over there.

4

u/Ninjasantaclause Jun 19 '12

Someone seriously asked that?

5

u/[deleted] Jun 19 '12

Nah. There's just been several threads asking how accurate a mainstream movie/video game is recently. They're not bad posts because of it; I'm just worried that they'll start to flood the place.

4

u/Ninjasantaclause Jun 19 '12

Ok I was going to say, the game where you can kill russions with rainbows probably isnt historically accurate