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Running a Non-Partisan Political Forum?

cptnHaddock asks: "The internet was supposed to give a new breath to democracy. While there has been some interesting initiatives, I feel a lot more could be done. Do you have any experience, tips to share, about running a non-partisan political forum? How to encourage well-thought postings and filter out the cynical ramblings, and how to moderate without censoring? Is there any good software that you would recommend for that task? Are there other solutions even better suited to running a policy-oriented discussion board?"

4 of 116 comments (clear)

  1. A Few Tips: by Eightyford · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I started a religion forum about six months ago, and I too was worried about flamewars and intolerance. Suprisingly, we have had very little name calling at all on our forum. Most of our members have came from slashdot through my sig link, so I guess that helped us get members that were above average in terms of writing and discussion skills.

    We use phpbb with a few mods, like quick reply and a captcha system that doesn't really work. Most of our top posters have mod abilities, so that really helps us control the spam posts. Amazingly, for a religious forum, we haven't censored any posts in six months. Basically, just encourage rational debate and I don't think you will have any need to censor.

    1. Re:A Few Tips: by Eightyford · · Score: 4, Insightful

      More tips:

      1. Start small. There's no need to create all of your forum topics at once. Start with a few and create more as they are needed.

      2. Welcome new members. It can be tough joining an established forum. New members don't always know the forum etiquette and they don't know any of the "in jokes". Welcome them and thank them for contributing.

      3. Don't censor. If someone steps out of line, just ask them nicely to "tone down" their posts. When the subject is politics, you have to be very careful to ensure that the poster doesn't feel like their view is being unfairly silenced.

      4. Allow guests to post. You will need a good captcha system, but allowing guest posting really helps to get the "lurkers" involved in the discussion.

      5. Start the discussions. Write a few posts everyday that you know will generate discussion. Start a poll that asks if abortion should be legal, and before you can say flamewar you'll have a hundred new posts. I also spam my own forum with "in the news" links. It can really help get the ball rolling.

      6. Forum games and offtopic posts. Create a lounge section for members to discuss issues that don't relate to politics. Forums should be about discussing issues with friends. Solve an online puzzle like www.antiriddle.com together, and the members will set aside their political differences and have fun together. Also, little games like word association and photoshop tennis can help strengthen the community.

      7. No ads! Don't put google ads between every post. That is annoying, and people don't want to join an online community created strictly for profit.

  2. 2 simple rules by wfberg · · Score: 4, Funny

    1. allow only discussion on events that happened atleast 120 years ago in rural Sweden
    2. no Swedes

    --
    SCO employee? Check out the bounty
  3. Re:Restrict access to only those people you like.. by LetterRip · · Score: 4, Informative

    We have had an excellent forum that has a reasonable sized user base, an extremely diverse set of viewpoints (Your standard variety of mild to hard core democrats, republicans, libertarians, but also views from communists, fascists, etc.), and consitently high quality posts.

    There are rules that people are expected to follow regarding respecting those you are discussing with. While there are occasional flame wars (and people are suspended from posting for a brief period of time when it gets out of hand), it doesn't require anything particular draconian. Requiring respect in a public discussion is not censorship.

    ornery.org for those interested.

    LetterRip