>>/153204/
That post lays out a stark but accurate picture of a long-standing cultural problem. The core of the issue isn't whether this toxicity exists it's why we collectively accept it as an unchangeable reality. The constant cycle of singling out individuals for relentless harassment isn't "drama"; it's a pattern of abuse that ultimately degrades the quality and longevity of the community itself.
Pukara is simply the latest person to be placed in the crosshairs of a pre-existing machine.
The argument that the "Pukara hate is so rabid because she has been shoved down everyone's throats" is worth examining. You could not come to these threads but you choose to. But you choose to interact with them for what? It's personal. You hate pukara for a personal reason.
Choosing to change the tone around her isn't about being "scared of drama" or needing a "nicer" safe space. It's about recognizing that there is a vast difference between discussing drama and embodying the most destructive, cruel forms of it. A board culture that delights in mocking murdered children, as the original post points out, has lost the plot entirely. Or do you think you're an entirely normal person for engaging in that? I don't expect you to answer