Allow me to amend what I said before: having looked through a certain moderator's post history, I actually witnessed some cases of definitely unfair and unwarned ban. Following the overall same trend Western societies seem to be following, it appears the thought police is becoming harsher here too, grounded in what is starting to resemble an ideology. I should have abstained from taking a look at the recent Transgender
tag discussion.
When, for all uneducated they might be, politely-worded opinions that differ from your views are ipso facto considered as unorthodox and should therefore be excluded on sight is a sign that intolerance and narrow-mindedness are not so faraway anymore.
Seeing (parts of) this community slowly becoming, over the years, more and more extreme is saddening, especially when, a few years ago, one could read such wise words; which, I believe, still are to this day, one of the most thoughtful and insightful comment this forum has ever beared. Though I have an idea and understand why moderation is siding with a certain view and holding a certain stance - there may be some underlying personal reasons - by no means does it justify arbitrarily banning.
Another reason to stick to my original advice: consensual opinions, as narrow as possible debates and cheering, light-minded comments!
I think what frigidbones (sorely missed, btw) said is germane here:
cis norms become seen as natural to yuri and certainly not political, while outside perspective can be freely treated as those of a political agenda or alien culture.
And the banned member in question wasn't expressing politely-worded opinions. They stormed into a thread about transgender to demand that everyone follow their own, trans-exclusive, definition of lesbian. There's no favoritism in what happened, just someone being a raging asshole and seeing what they can get away with in the field of assholery.
As for those "wise words", they largely consisted of Phallocentrism 101 sandwiched between: putting cis women and cis women's knobbly bits on an unasked-for pedestal; calling trans women fake if they fail to conform to a stereotype of femininity; and drawing a fantasy dichotomy of "transwomen and real women", which makes as much sense as saying "intersexwomen and real women". Oh, and yelling at younger trans people with the temerity to demand -- the horror! -- acceptance.
The world doesn't always bend to accomodate one person's pet theory of what being trans or lesbian means. And as a somewhat-old Gen Xer, I'm glad that views like Cryssoberyl's are becoming less prominent. When held up as the one way to be, they do real harm.