this post was submitted on 10 Jul 2023
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Tumblr's problem, at least when I stopped using it 10 years ago, was that it was kind of an SJW hellscape. The most toxic of toxic activists made their home there, and it was a profoundly unpleasant Internet experience. They'd have to pay me to use their site again.
By that same logic reddit was a harbor of alt-right and other shitty people but if you curated your experience with it you could mostly avoid it. Similarly so with tumblr in my experience.
That's good to know.
Tumblr didn't have a ton of curation tools back when I was a regular user, but Twitter did, so I ended up spending most of my time online there until October of last year. The incident where Elon Musk carried a sink to the office was all the info I needed to know Twitter was about to take a nosedive. Luckily I really enjoy the fediverse.
You can search through tags to find people but honestly i find reblog chains suitable for finding people i'm interested in after getting started with some fandom tags and other stuff.
I think this was more of a feature of 10 years ago - that being, people meaning well and learning about political theories for the very first time, but then ignoring all nuance and using those concepts to bully each other instead of actually make the world better. Vox has an interesting article about that phenomenon as it played out in fandom circles, and if I remember right it does talk specifically about Tumblr. Huge difference between actually working toward social justice, and simply recycling justicey-sounding words into arguments and harassment campaigns. Things do seem to have leveled out a lot as people have aged and norms have shifted a bit, but I can understand someone feeling wary of the site for that reason.
Would be curious in the article if you can turn up a link to it.
https://www.vox.com/culture/23733213/fandom-purity-culture-what-is-proship-antiship-antifandom It’s in the second section, but the full article is well worth a read. Edit: some good stuff at the links, too.