Let me preface by saying, I would love to hear counter points and am fully open to the fact that I could be wrong and totally out of touch. I just want to have some dialogue around something that’s been bothering me in the fediverse.

More and more often I keep hearing people refer to “normies”. I think by referring to other people as “normies”, whether you intend to or not, you inadvertently gatekeep and create an exclusive environment rather than an inclusive one in the fediverse.

If I was not that familiar with the fediverse and decided to check it out and the first thing I read was a comment about “normies”, I would quite honestly be very put off. It totally has a negative connotation and doesn’t even encapsulate any one group. I just read a comment about someone grouping a racist uncle and funny friend into the same category of normie because they aren’t up to date on the fediverse or super tech savvy or whatever.

I don’t want to see any Meta bs in the fediverse. I barely want to see half of the stuff from Reddit in the fediverse. I don’t want to see the same echo chamber I do everywhere else.

I do want to see more users and more perspectives and a larger user base though. I want to see kindness and compassion. I want to talk to people about topics they are interested in. I want to have relevant discussions without it dissolving into some commentary on some unrelated hot topic thing.

I think calling people normies creates a more toxic, exclusive place which I personally came here to avoid.

Just my two cents! I know for most people using the term it isn’t meant to be malicious, but I think it comes off that way.

Love to hear all of your thoughts.

  • @RxBrad
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    • grady77OP
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      181 year ago

      I guess that’s something I didn’t consider. I kind of feel like that is still creating an us vs them mentality though…

      • macniel
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        231 year ago

        But that’s pretty much what a group of people is? The people who are inside the group and those that are outside. What is the problem with this?

        • grady77OP
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          61 year ago

          I mean not get too far down that rabbit hole, but I would argue that we are all human beings first and we all belong to many different groups, not just one.

          And I think you’re missing my point.

          • macniel
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            31 year ago

            of course can groups overlap, and we are all humans but that doesn’t mean that group dynamics are a bad thing?

            • pjhenry1216
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              -81 year ago

              These aren’t actual group dynamics. In any way. Exclusion and “us vs them” is not a positive group dynamic. Do not promote it.

              • DrNeurohax
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                61 year ago

                So you’re saying there are people who DO use “normies” and people that DON’T use “normies”. These are not two groups of people. Shit, I just joined this thread, so that makes ME one of YOU, and there’s OTHERS that aren’t here. Are WE the elitists? Or are THEY the “normies”? YOU said there’s no there’s no US or THEM, so EVERYONE is talking in this thread. ANYONE not in this thread must not exist because I know I exist, so YOU thread posters must exist, but wait, that makes ME an US and YOU a THEM.

                (I’m not trying to be snarky, but this argument is exactly as nonsensical.)

                • pjhenry1216
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                  -31 year ago

                  Buddy, are you ok? You can define “groups” by literally anything. The existence of a delineation is not “group dynamics.” Group dynamics is not the existence of a categorizational model. Group dynamics is the interaction between two groups. And the phrase used was “us vs them” and I will point out that “vs” has a very specific meaning.

                  What the fuck are you on about? You sound like someone on crack for their first time. I never said there was no us or them. I said there’s no reason to have us vs them. I’m not sure what part of reading comprehension you failed at, but you need to improve it.

        • genoxidedev1
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          31 year ago

          The problem is that generalization exists.

          Every person that ever met or talked to a person that is part of the non-“normie” group does not want to associate with other people that might be in the same group. I’ve experienced it myself often enough even though I don’t consider myself far gone like the people that talk to every “normie” in a condescending way, but they don’t know it.

          I genuinely try to hide the fact that I have fun tinkering with my PC or programming because of that. Because I do not want people that are not tech affinitive to think ‘I’m probably just a stuck-up asshole’.

            • DrNeurohax
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              11 year ago

              No no no, it’s stereotyping and prejudice when OTHER people do it to US. WE should tell THEM that THEY are US, and by saying this to OURSELVES we have said it to THEM, so that WE know that THEY know, but now THEY are a THEM again.

              YOU don’t get it. WE get it. YOU should all be like US where there is no YOU and US, there is only the WE that is YOU and US, but thereis no YOU and US, there is only the WE that is YOU and US, but thereis no YOU and US, there is only the WE that is YOU and US, but thereis no YOU and US, there is only the WE that is YOU and US.

              Simple. See? You don’t? But, YOU must because there is no…

              • pjhenry1216
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                21 year ago

                What? I’m assuming you are using your same failed understanding of another of my comments here. If you aren’t going to actually point out what you think is wrong, but instead try to illustrate it with nonsensical statements, I can’t honestly pinpoint where communication failed. Just try using basic logic next time if you feel so inclined to elucidate whatever point you’re trying to make.

          • grady77OP
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            31 year ago

            Definitely elements of this resonate for me, but that’s why I think it’s just silly. They are a needless way of creating division where there doesn’t need to be.

          • @dot20
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            11 year ago

            That’s your loss, man. Personally, I don’t feel the need to associate with people who are condescending towards my hobbies.

        • pjhenry1216
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          31 year ago

          This is absolutely not how you approaching communities. They literally said it creates an Us vs them mentality and you claim that as a positive? Groups are not about us vs them. At all. Nor is it how you build communities. That’s how you create echo chambers and cliques and lead to your own downfall as a community.

        • Zorque
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          The problem isn’t that that exists, it’s when people decide that not being in the group is bad, and not just a casual state of being.

          • @dot20
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            31 year ago

            No reasonable person is implying that.

            • Zorque
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              01 year ago

              No reasonable person is implying that having different groups of people is a bad thing, either, and yet that’s what DmMacniel was inferring others were saying.

              • macniel
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                11 year ago

                I didn’t imply that though? I simply stated that there is an inside of a group and an outside of a group. Also people can belong to several groups that may or may not overlap.

                It’s neither good nor bad up until people think it’s bad or good to be part of one specific group.

        • @ttmrichter
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          21 year ago

          You missed to very key letters here. Here’s the original statement with the two key letters highlighted:

          […]creating an us →vs← them mentality though…

          Nobody that I’ve seen here has said that there is no “in” or “out” vis a vis the group. The objection is over those two key letters.

    • pjhenry1216
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      171 year ago

      Pretending there isn’t any condescension toward the “normies” when using the term is blatantly exhibiting the exact behavior the OP referenced. It’s not how inclusivity works in a community at all. It alienates anyone that isn’t already a part of it.

      • @RxBrad
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        • @quasi_moto
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          No of course it’s reasonable that they wouldn’t understand the ins and outs. The op and commenter you’re replying to are talking about the connotation of the word, not the fact that a hobbyist understands their hobby.

          Take the term Trekkie for example – people who are into star trek can become Trekkies which symbolizes that they’ve joined a community. That term can be used to mean that two people both belong to a community (i.e., “we’re Trekkies”) or it can be used to refer negatively to people in that community by those who aren’t in it (i.e., “Trekkies smell bad”).

          There are (at least) two things happening here that people are picking up on. One is that context matters, and the way that the term normie is often used is not a positive one. I’ve personally never seen anyone refer to themself proudly as a normie, have you? And the other is that we’re referring to normies, a group we ostensibly don’t belong to, as a homogeneous blob which is obviously not accurate.

          I doubt anyone’s feelings are especially hurt if they’re called a normie, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t a dismissive and usually negatively valenced term used to refer to a massive and diverse group of people.

          • @RxBrad
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            • @quasi_moto
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              I agree the way you’re using it doesn’t sound negative. But I don’t think that’s a representative use of this term. Take a look at the top few entries on urban dictionary, they don’t seem very judgement free to me…

              https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Normie

              The point of this post is that even if you don’t mean it in the way that urban dictionary describes it, that’s how some people will interpret it.

            • pjhenry1216
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              51 year ago

              I mean, read even just half the comments on just one page of comments here and you should see that it’s extremely common to not use the word in the manner you’re stating. We’re not talking about that nor is the poster.

    • sab
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      131 year ago

      There’s a hint of elitism to it though, at least as it’s commonly used.

      I saw a comment the other day that referred to Instagram users as “people you wouldn’t want to associate yourself with”. I don’t know who these people think normal people are.

      • s4if
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        51 year ago

        I think it is more self-deprecation than elitism as (in my image) normies tend to have more friends and healier relationship and hobbies.

        • @[email protected]
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          81 year ago

          I always hated the stereotype that Reddit was full of nothing but loser virgins trapped in their mom’s basement who had no friends and no chance of a fulfilling life.

          I mean, sure there are a lot of people there (and here) that probably fit most, if not all of that stereotype, but the constant need to point out what losers we all are is problematic in so many ways. Namely that some of us do actually have friends, hobbies, and lives, but still can relate to the overall vibe of being a bit of a weirdo or a loner or whatever, but also it has a tendency to create this barrel of crabs type mental barrier where it just feels like the constant reminders of “if this is all I am, this is all I will ever be” keeps presenting itself. It’s tiring and is the reason why I always kept all the self-insulting subs like me_irl on my block list.

      • Zorque
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        41 year ago

        They probably don’t want to associate with “normal” people because they revel in their “weird” status.

        Which, honestly, is kind of understandable and relatable. People are often mocked and reviled for sticking out, for being different. It makes a sad sort of sense that they’d lash out at those that represent that “normalness” that they’re told they’ll never achieve.

        I certainly don’t think it’s healthy in the long term, but I can at least fathom the logic that got them there.

    • Chariotwheel
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      101 year ago

      Tbh, it mostly sounds condescending. Like “they are the normals, as opposed to us, we are the ones that see further than them” a lot of times.

      Though I did have seen things that are clearly self-aware, mostly the “NORMIES OUT REEEE”-stuff. But there is definitely both.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        Many is not all. And by creating an us vs them mentality where I’m “us” for the most part, but not for the whole part, there’s situations where the need to choose is being presented. It’s gatekeeping for the sake of gatekeeping, and really isn’t part of a healthy community of people.

    • Brad Ganley
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      71 year ago

      This is my thought. The OP leads me to believe that being “normal” is considered bad

    • @[email protected]
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      My perception in the early days of reddit was that the majority of users were also tech weirdos. So there’s that…

    • @Rhin0
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      11 year ago

      I am a Fallout Ghoul

  • @fubo
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    451 year ago

    A slur always tells you more about the person who uses it than about the person they’re referring to.

      • @nyar
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        161 year ago

        TERF isn’t a slur, it’s an accurate descriptor.

        Terfs are trans exclusionary. Terfs are on the borders of feminist thought, making them radical (and not in the cool way).

        They only want it to be a slur so they aren’t accurately described as what they are.

        • @nuzzlerat
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          121 year ago

          Actually I think it is quite a stretch to call them feminists in any way. 99% of the time they ally with the far right and many of their leaders advocate against things like contraception and healthcare for women

          • @Blamemeta
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            31 year ago

            Thats more of the term being overused. Only a vanishing small number of people are terfs.

        • @Kinglink
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          61 year ago

          Yeah but “Radical”… TERFS ain’t radical, nor bodacious nor totally tubular dude!

          Accept everyone, that’s the TMNT way!

      • @fubo
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        There’s a specific group of people who readily use the word “TERF”, and you’re clearly identifying yourself as in that group. However, I’ve seen folks use the word “TERF” to refer even to people who aren’t Fs at all, and certainly not RFs. JK Rowling may identify as a feminist, but she’s not a “radical” anything. So yeah, I think using “TERF” does more clearly identify the position of the speaker than the person so described.

      • @Peregrinus
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        11 year ago

        if terf isn’t a slur, Normie isn’t either. people seem to get irrationally upset about the word normal. normal is a well defined word, the same way cis is but it seems one group is fine with one whilst the other isn’t.

        instead of focusing on labels and how much they upset you (I don’t mean who I am replying to), focus on understanding and respecting people’s differences, regardless of terminology.

    • TwilightVulpine
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      11 year ago

      It really does say a lot when the dreaded other that they want to avoid is someone who is normal.

      • @fubo
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        11 year ago

        To be completely blunt about it, if someone uses “normie” seriously, I expect they also think they’re oppressed by age-of-consent laws and possibly also laws against rape. At the very least, they don’t own a TV because there aren’t enough lolis on basic cable.

        • TwilightVulpine
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          31 year ago

          Sucks that we have to deal with those types but I wouldn’t go so far lump them all like that. I feel like some of it might involve neurodivergent people who just don’t feel like they get the best of treatment out there. But just this elitism driven by terminally-online brain rot can get bad enough by itself, it’s not a good mindset.

  • @hutchmcnugget
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    351 year ago

    I have seen the word normie used in almost exclusively sarcastic or tongue in cheek contexts.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      The internet has a way of taking things that are used sarcastically and removing every bit of irony. The Flat Earth Society, PCMR, and The Donald subreddit all started out as making fun of the people that are now 100% unironically part of very thriving (and toxic to differing levels) communities.

      I think that will almost certainly happen to the word normie, if it hasn’t already.

    • JoeCoT
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      61 year ago

      I’ve only really seen it in two contexts. Mainly “don’t scare the normies”, which was largely the advice given to my larp communities to not freak out people in real life with their hobby stuff, and probably also applies to subcultures like furries and such. And secondarily as self-deprecating. I’m a Facebook meme group “Normie Has-Beens” tied to the page “Stale Memes for Normie Has-Beens”, and it’s certainly not people who consider themselves normal.

    • sab
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      It feels a bit like the contemporary counterpoint to 1337, and more or less equally silly.

    • grady77OP
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      31 year ago

      I have definitely seen it used outside of that. Again, I think the effects are largely unintentional but from an outsider looking in could be very off putting.

    • pjhenry1216
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      31 year ago

      This post and many of the comments should make it abundantly clear folks have an entirely different experience with the word. I’m not sure what you’re trying to add to the conversation other than to try and claim everyone else doesn’t have valid concerns.

      • @hutchmcnugget
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        11 year ago

        OP asked for my thoughts, I gave my thoughts. I’m sorry you think my experience invalidates yours.

        • pjhenry1216
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          Thoughts can still be provided in a useful fashion without trying to invalidate everyone else’s opinion.

          Edit: I didn’t say your experience invalidated anything. Your choice of words did.

  • arcturus
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    291 year ago

    nah, you’re right

    the term always gives me images of channer culture; like it reminds me when the internet as a whole thought that 4chan and its ilk were cool and elite for being shitty for “lulz”

    it needs to be retired

    • finthechat
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      81 year ago

      That’s where it came from. Back in the day when everyone on 4chan was some type of “fag”:

      -Newfag - new users
      -Oldfag - old users
      -Normalfag - normally-adjusted human being not on teh interwebz, later became shortened to “normie”

    • @TORFdot0
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      61 year ago

      Doesn’t “normie” come from /b/? I don’t think I saw it used anywhere else until shitposting subs like /r/dankmemes started calling who don’t use memes correctly normies

      • @ttmrichter
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        11 year ago

        Uh … I was in circles that used words like “norms” and “normals” and, yes, “normies” before the Internet was a “thing”. SF fandom of the '70s was easily as nerdy and toxic as are any of today’s Internet circle jerks.

        Sorry, Kiddies1, but very little of what you do is new. Sometimes the techniques are new (because technology happened) but humans have been human for, well, as long as humans have existed.


        1 If you’re finding this word offensive, you might want to take a long, hard look at how you use words like the one that triggered this thread before the inevitable downvoting.

    • Lunyan
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      41 year ago

      Yeah agreed. It was kinda funny 10 years ago, but I thought we would’ve grown past it by now. Feels like needless gatekeeping

  • @WhoRoger
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    I just see the term to mean the opposite of specialist, or someone who is passionate about the topic.

    In internet terms, it generally means not a geek.

    It’s a good distinction, because for geeks, internet is something inherently interesting on a technological and philosophical level. For, well, normies, it’s just an appliance they don’t need to know much about.

    Similarly if you go to a car show but don’t really know shit about cars other than they have 4 wheels, you’re a normie in that environment. Your requirements on what a car should be like, are fundamentally different from someone who likes to tweak and tinker.

    I wish the term could just mean that without any negative connotations, because I don’t see anything wrong with that distinction.

    Ed/add: Nobody can know everything about every topic, so everyone is a normie in some category. Usually without realising it. So that’s just it. Not necessarily an insult, and doesn’t even make much sense as one, I think.

  • @zeppo
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    141 year ago

    To me it means “not a computer dork”. I always interpreted it as somewhat self-deprecating.

    • XIIIesq
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      91 year ago

      Yh, it’s meant to be ironic.

      Fucking normies, REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!

      • Adlach
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        The whole “autistic screeching” thing kinda reinforces OP’s point. It’s pretty mean.

        • XIIIesq
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          It reinforces the point that the sort of person that calls other people normies might have mental issues and should not be taken seriously.

        • Rhynoplaz
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          21 year ago

          Yeah. I support the use of normies because it’s saying “I’M the weirdo here, and nobody should be expected to know this shit”. The screeching is just annoying and disrespectful to everyone. Anyone who uses it is a child.

  • @BURN
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    131 year ago

    I think lots of people who use “normie” unironically are creating an us vs them mentality. It’s not malicious, it’s often how they see the world. People who are “abnormal” are often othered in the world and pushed away. This is a way for others to take back being the “out” group in a little way that makes you feel less out of place.

    I’m guilty of it in other facets of my life.

    • XIIIesq
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      71 year ago

      I’ve never seen it used unironically, but maybe I’m in different communities.

  • @BaldManGoomba
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    111 year ago

    Normies just means people who aren’t in the in group and to me means we are the weird ones, exclusive group or have uncommon interests or knowledge.

    It is important to be self aware that in the context of the fediverse and meme culture things you are use to are weird, different, and sometimes confusing. Perfect example has been the beans and the 3 day poop thing. Normal people don’t get and will think it is weird if they know nothing about the trend. Another example is I am a rock climber if I reference a jug or a sloper it means nothing to normies or people unaware of the lingo. So a jug joke isn’t something other people get

  • @shy_bibliophile
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    91 year ago

    I think that context is really important. I’ve mostly seen this term used by neurodivergent people when expressing frustration with not being understood by the general populace. Also, these conversations were usually in spaces created by and for neurodivergent people, so the use of normie to indicate everyone else makes sense to me. In that context, it always comes across as kind of self-deprecating to me, an acknowledgement that the person speaking isn’t considered normal because of their condition.

    Based on the context you’ve described, I’m not surprised you don’t like the term. If that was were I first encountered it I wouldn’t like it either.

    • Gormadt
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      31 year ago

      This is the exact context I primarily see it and use it in, also in LGBTQ+ spaces as well.

      The same kind of uses as well, usually used to refer to straight people or people less versed in the queer culture and terminology.

      Using it outside of those spaces is hella cringe though.

  • @[email protected]
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    81 year ago

    I’m with you on this one, in a vacuum I don’t really have a problem with the term “normie” but here it is completely being used as gatekeeping.

    This whole meta controversy has really caused some brain rot, a lot of people talk about this place as if it’s better because it “gatekeeps”. They say they enjoy this place because it is niche and doesn’t have the “below room temperature IQ posters” (actual quote I saw)

    I don’t like this attitude, I really don’t like it. It is way to common on the internet, especially for hobby communities to have this attitude.

    • @trambe
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      81 year ago

      Exactly, pushing people away is not how you grow a platform

      Like, what happened to just downvoting low effort or low “quality” posts? Do we have to pass IQ tests to allow users on Lemmy now?

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        Or if you really care about not seeing “mass appeal social media content”, like, just don’t join those communities???

        Like the whole “it’s better if those people aren’t on this platform” is so stupid when you consider the entire aspect of fragmentation going on for federated communities…

    • @whatsarefoogee
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      61 year ago

      I disagree entirely.

      Gatekeeping has a negative connotation to it, and it can be used negatively. But gatekeeping is also necessary if you want to maintain a good community.

      The increase of ease of use of social media and internet at large, and making it available to the very general public is what caused social media to become a toxic waste dump of misinformation, low effort content and lack of critical thought.

      The difference of quality of reddit between 10 years ago and today is absolutely staggering. Reddit is practically unusable outside of small communities.

      The relative difficulty of using the internet acted as a natural gatekeeping mechanism to keep your racist uncle Bob and your antivax aunt Karen away. Now they can join by clicking a few buttons on their phone.

      Since that no longer works, the communities need to take gatekeeping into their own hands. Otherwise, it can be overrun by people people who are just stupid, to be frank.

      • grady77OP
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        31 year ago

        Hmm. I think you’re right to an extent. I think the gatekeeping you’re talking about should come from the server level and block anything from meta or from other servers with those kinds of people.

        Using the word “normie” can be off putting to people we do want on this platform which is kind of my point.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        (TLDR: if you only read one thing make it so its the last paragraph, it is the main argument anyways the first part was more of the rationale behind it)

        I disagree with your notion. Although I feel there are two meanings for gatekeeping clashing. First there is gatekeeping in a traditional sense, which is filtering. As in you need to meet certain requirements, be it that your post sticks to the rules, moderation would technically be gatekeeping here as it rejects the content made by the people who dont adhere to what the community has determined. In this sense it is good

        Then there is the “urban” meaning of the world (not sure if that is the word in english for popular use of words) where here in the internet gatekeeping is more referred to keeping something “pure” by excluding people out, or for keeping a sense of elitism. I feel almost all fandoms went through this phase during the early 2010s late 2000s, just as an example if you ever said you liked anime but had only watched shōnen you would have been mocked by every single person on the forum. Gaming communities have also been incredibly toxic in this regards, need I remind you of the entire GamerGate era…

        Sure this two meanings can conflate, but by dividing I can explain why I am opposed to the second attitude while not minding the first. The gatekeeping by the communities, which is necessary as you say to keep good communities is certainly good. Of course we need moderation and rules to make communities work, even really heavy moderation and exclusions can be good as long as they are rational and serve a particular purpose like what r/askhistorias did by removing 99% of comments.

        But the attitude of “things are better now because you have to be really smart to be here” is a stupid elitist notion, change it a bit and its the same argument that has been used to gatekeep hobbies so strongly instead of fostering someone’s interest in a thing into something better. Here what we need is not to “keep those people out” but instead we need to embrace them and push them to make better content. Simple as, we designate the rules and we create the content that becomes the standard. Communities are far better shaped by setting a standard of appropriate conduct that people who are joining replicate instead of outright denying some people because they are “normies” that will ruin things for us.

        • @ttmrichter
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          11 year ago

          But the attitude of “things are better now because you have to be really smart to be here” is a stupid elitist notion, change it a bit and its the same argument that has been used to gatekeep hobbies so strongly instead of fostering someone’s interest in a thing into something better.

          My quibble with “better” aside (if you’re talking a hobby, saying something is “better” as an objective fact flirts dangerously with wrongfun which is a concept that needs vicious, boot-stomp-on-the-neck grades of mockery to silence quickly), there’s a practical reason to be less of an asshole in your hobby.

          I can provide you with two solid examples of hobby asshole gatekeeping that have, for all intents and purposes, killed the respective hobby … to the detriment of not only that hobby but to wider society.

          Historical Wargaming

          There was a time, believe it or not, when there were no computer games and when tabletop RPGs were a fringe hobby for nerds who were outcasts even among nerds. The true alpha nerd played historical wargames. These could be miniatures-focused or board-focused (and there was some not-so-friendly rivalry between these camps more often than not, despite the significant overlap). There were huge companies devoted to publishing the games, and in the case of miniatures games, an astonishing variety of companies making pewter figurines for every conceivable era of history. (Fantasy and SF wargaming was a thing too, but they were viewed as only slightly less outcast than role-playing gamers.) There was even a thriving industry in supplemental products: terrain, say, or a bewildering selection of magazines, or custom measuring tools for miniatures games, or board protection systems for board games.

          Where are they all now?

          Most of the old-timey publishers are gone. (Here’s me pouring one out for SPI. 😥) The few mid-timey publishers that remain are hollow shells who only hazard an occasional reprint or an occasional (usually failed) attempt at a Kickstarter. The (tabletop) RPG industry has, in that time, had not one, not two, but THREE boom/bust cycles (we’re in the boom side of the third now). Board and miniatures wargames still exist … but are primarily fantasy and/or SF with historical games being the tiny fringe of sad, old grognards who rail against people actually wanting to have fun. And what caused this?

          When RPGs (and paired SF/fantasy wargames) started to rise, grognards did the toxic form of gatekeeping and basically made historical wargaming “that hobby filled with bitter old guys who hate us”. In a move that surprised nobody (except the grognards) people started to stay away from historical wargames in droves. As grognards died off, or grew away from the hobby, nobody came into it to fill in the ranks with new enthusiasts. Now historical wargaming is the domain of sad old men grumbling at how kids aren’t interested in history.

          And that, there, is the cost I mentioned to society at large: when I was a kid wargames were a gateway drug into history. I personally know a dozen people who went from “meh” on history to post-graduate studies in history because of wargames. (I’ve known one or two who went the same path through RPGs, but nowhere near the numbers that picked up a love from history by recreating it.)

          Ham Radio

          Unlike historical wargaming, I was never a part of ham culture. A lot of my historical wargaming friends, however, were, so I’ve always been there on the side watching that clusterfuck play out. You want gatekeeping that kills a hobby? Just look at the ham radio community. The licensing requirements for ham radio needed you to learn Morse code until 2007. It was an absolute requirement: you had to show certain levels of Morse code skill to get a license. That nobody actually used Morse code in anger in the ham community at any time in my conscious life didn’t matter. It was a requirement and the ham community clung to that requirement like a rottweiler clinging to a meaty bone (attached to the leg of a trespasser).

          Now picture a potential new ham pre-2007. They see their father’s friends playing with radios and talking with people around the world. This is fascinating and they want to know how they can start up in it. “OK, first you have to waste months practising and studying this useless skill that you will never touch ever again, but hey at least it’s tedious and pointless!” And that’s just one element in a whole bunch of licensing requirements that are a barrier to entry. Even today, without the Morse requirement, you have to write an exam to get the most basic of the ham licenses (and that is so restrictive that unless you’re in it for the long haul to get the higher licenses, you might as well not bother: there’s no casual hobby in ham).

          And here’s the kicker. All that work to use technology that lets you talk to people around the world. Just like, oh, I don’t know, about a billion phone apps that anybody under the age of 30 has never even seen a world without.

          The ham community gate-kept themselves into irrelevance and, while there are charms to the hobby, they’re a) not very well advertised, and b) buried behind tedious studies and exams and procedures that just strip any shine from it.

          And that’s not even the worst part. No, that’s the second-worst part.

          The worst part is that ham licenses are a public registry. You can look up the real life name and address of any ham call sign. Take a call sign at random: KB6NU. EVERYTHING about that call sign’s registry is publicly available with a simple lookup. (Before someone screams “DOXXXXXXX!” my “random” selection comes from a public blog where the owner of said call sign uses it as an example of how to read one.)

          Given that there’s really good non-ham technology out there (it’s this thing called something like the Innarwebtubes?) that will let you harass the ever-loving fuck out of someone when you have fairly basic information about them (picture a typical *chan user going into ham, getting pissed off at what someone says, looking up their RL identity and then SWATting them) and you’ll have an idea of why an open, public registry is simply idiotic. That by itself is gate-keeping of the worst kind: entire swaths of vulnerable groups (racial and sexual minorities for starters) would be wide open to serious RL attacks.

          And that is why ham radio is basically a dead hobby. (I’m going to ignore the whining in some circles about the cost of entry: loads of hobbies are expensive to start off in. That’s just the nature of the hobby.) They gate-kept themselves into oblivion and then made themselves an active source of fear with idiotic policies on top of that. And as with the first example, this has an impact on society at large. And unlike that one, which is a bit weak of an impact, the aging and dying off of hams has serious repercussions.

          Repercussion #1: When (not if!) telephone systems fail in disaster zones, so do all the fancier, “better” technologies. In case of wide-scale disasters (even today!) ham radio operators have been lifelines, helping authorities and civilians alike coordinate, passing information along and generally being exceptionally useful. As hams die off, one of our best tools for communication into areas where more sophisticated technology has failed dies off with it.

          Repercussion #2: As with wargames above, ham radio was a major gateway. In the case of hams, it was a gateway into electrical engineering. I’ve mentioned that a lot of my friends (from the wargaming community) are hams. Every single one of them, no exceptions, is also an electrical engineer. All of them were drawn to engineering because of ham radio. They learned the fundamentals of electronics, electronic design, RF, etc. as children through ham radio. You know what’s getting hard to find these days? People who are electrical engineers with a solid grasp of the fundamentals. Because more and more engineers are getting into the profession for the perceived monetary benefits instead of genuine interest. And with one of the main on-ramps of the past growing us new genuine engineers now littered with closed and barred gates, that’s a problem that’s not going away anytime soon.

      • pjhenry1216
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        11 year ago

        Don’t confuse community and platform. Fediverse is meant to be diverse by nature. You can gatekeep a server I suppose, but be careful with how ridiculously vague many people define the term here and you’re ready to ban those people. Treating everyone in a made up group as if they’re all the same is not a behavior you want to get in the habit of.

    • grady77OP
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      31 year ago

      Yes, that is exactly how I feel! It honestly makes me kind of sad because I truly love how awesome of a space a lot of these communities are and I think people don’t realize the effect that words and attitudes like that have on the greater experience and vibe.

    • TwilightVulpine
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      31 year ago

      If anything has become clear over the years is that IQ has no correlation with saying smart or sensible things. There are very smart people out there that keep posting stupid things.

      • @ttmrichter
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        21 year ago

        It’s almost as if IQ measures nothing but your ability to write IQ tests.

        Almost.

  • @GregorGizeh
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    71 year ago

    I really dislike that term, it makes me cringe to be considered part of a group that uses it unironically. That’s 4chan speech, let’s keep it in that cesspool.

  • magic_lobster_party
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    71 year ago

    I’ve always assumed that people who use “normie” in their language are probably teenagers with superiority complex.

  • genoxidedev1
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    61 year ago

    “Normie” is one of the few words that I cringe over everytime I read it. I consider myself to be in, or adjacent to, the group of people that would use that word, since I am tech affinitive and that group is usually the one that uses it. But I cringe everytime I see it used unironically because I don’t want non-tech affinitive (or lesser affinitive) people to lump every person that has something to do with IT or similar into the group of people they don’t want nothing to do with because they’re always condescending towards them.

    It’s literally like as if you’re saying “Did you know that I have an IQ of 150?”.

    You’re not gatekeeping anyone out of your life by using that word, you’re gatekeeping yourself out of every “normal” persons life by using that word.

    • grady77OP
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      51 year ago

      This makes a lot of sense! And I would argue if you just met me you would 1000% put me in the normie category. Buuut if you got to know me you would come to find out I’m a goofy uber nerd who works with a bunch of software engineers and loves technology and gaming and reading scientific journals on particle physics.

      I quite frankly don’t want to be in either group because the entire concept of normie vs not normie is kind of silly in my opinion.

    • DrNeurohax
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      41 year ago

      I 100% agree that word is cringe and I’m totally into the fediverse for the long haul, but we have to address the pachyderm in the room: The word “Fediverse” is just as cringe.

      I, … I’m sorry. I can read it in a document, but the second a human being types it, I can’t take it seriously. I don’t care if folks want to shorten it to something like the FI (Federated Instances). Yes, there are other uses of the word “federate”, but it immediately sounds like a federal intraweb domain or a group of Star Trek policy makers.

      “Fediverse” is “netizen 2.0.”
      “Fediverse” is “cruising on the information superhighway Pro.”
      Please tell me I’m not alone in thinking this.

      • @ttmrichter
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        11 year ago

        You’re not alone, no. “Fediverse” is almost, but not quite, as silly a term as “Metaverse”.

  • blightbow
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    1 year ago

    The cycle of social tech becoming mainstream and conversational norms being dragged down to a least common denominator predates modern social media. The earliest example I can think of is Usenet (newsgroups):

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eternal_September

    During the 1980s and early 1990s, Usenet and the Internet were generally the domain of dedicated computer professionals and hobbyists; new users joined slowly, in small numbers, and observed and learned the social conventions of online interaction without having much of an impact on the experienced users. The only exception to this was September of every year, when large numbers of first-year college students gained access to the Internet and Usenet through their universities. These large groups of new users who had not yet learned online etiquette created a nuisance for the experienced users, who came to dread September every year. Once ISPs like AOL made Internet access widely available for home users, a continuous influx of new users began, which continued through to 2015 according to Jason Koebler, making it feel like it is always “September” to the more experienced users.

    It’s the same cycle. Social tech starts off being used by a smaller number of technically inclined people. Communities are smaller and normalized civility is more commonplace. Peer pressure holds people to those norms. Once a social tech balloons from mainstream interest, the norms (or zeitgeist if you prefer) shift toward the incoming population because they outnumber the early population and exert more peer pressure. The new norms become a compromise between the norms of the incoming mob and what the community moderators are willing/able to enforce.

    It’s tempting to put a label on the incoming demographic and use it in a derogatory way, but removing the label from the equation doesn’t change the source of unhappiness; the memory of what once was and the knowledge that it can’t last when cultural dilution sets in.

    (no, I’m not providing any solutions to the problem, this is just rambling that might provide more insightful people with a starting point)