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Is there a more politically conservative part of the fediverse?

I'm a conservative. I don't mind the liberal stuff here. It's good to learn the other side, but I don't want a liberal echo chamber. I'd like to be more politically balanced in the fediverse. Is there any way I can do that?

276 comments
  • I understand how you feel, let me know if you find anything. I'm more left leaning myself, but I'm also not a fan of echo chambers and it gets pretty tiring and annoying seeing the same stuff over and over again. At the end of the day, I just wanna see an open, fair, and balanced discussion. The Fediverse is undeniably very left leaning currently, which is surprising to me since you'd think the anti-censorship design on paper would appeal more to people on the right who are against big tech and censorship, but I guess not? It's interesting.

  • If you want to see where the conservatives moved to, go to scored.co. (formerly thedonald.win). The worst thing about them isn't limited to the unhinged garbage they spew, but that they are just such bores.

    It's so awful in every way imaginable that it makes me appreciate what we have here even more.

  • It depends on what you mean by conservative. If you're going by the American definition, then good luck as all of those have been mass defederated due to them nearly always turning into far right toxic harassment zones. If you are European though and go by their definition, you'll probably be fine. America leans very right by default. Democrats to a degree are skewed right wing at the very least economically.

    • This. Conservative in the US is basically extreme-right/fascism in the rest of the world. Even democrats would be considered right learning in say, Canada.

      If you are the MAGA kind, you WILL need an echo chamber because nobody wants to interact with these anymore.

  • I'm just going to say try making an account on the unilem.org instance, from there you'll be able to access all instances from the fediverse. It's about as politically balanced as they get since they almost never defederate, it doesn't have very many communities though so you'll have to find those on other instances, by the way if a community from another instance doesn't appear in the one that you're in, go to the search bar in the communities tab and type ![community name]@[instance domain] and assuming that you typed it correctly it'll usually sync it and then you can subscribe to it.

    Since unilem hasn't defederated any of the big instances you'll very likely have access to all communities on Lemmy.

  • maybe exploding-heads.com? is that site still around?
    I only know that on Lemmyverse, most of conservatives happily stays on reddit given most committed progressives migrated here. Or may be they go to squabblr, its owner says they are welcomed there.
    There are many though, on mastodon-verse if you like twitter-esque experience. There are enough users and instances to hold meaningful conversations.

  • Conservative makes no sense. It's not changing for the sake of lot changing. Liberalism is the same, it's change for changes sake. Both are bad, you change when a policy is a reasonable improvement regardless if its status cuo or not.

    Now, I don't know if lemmy is more European or not than reddit, but the left/right leaningness of the gut feeling policies people have, will be very different than what you might expect.

    I would however suggest not looking for "your team" groups as that becomes like your local football team, which never leads to good policies. It's just hive mind.

    Discuss policies and perhaps join groups like that.

    I do not have any direct good suggestions however.

    • Conservative makes no sense. It’s not changing for the sake of lot changing.

      I agree with this part completely.

      Liberalism is the same, it’s change for changes sake.

      Where is this coming from though?

      Liberalism is a political and moral philosophy based on the rights of the individual, liberty, consent of the governed, political equality, right to private property and equality before the law.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberalism

      It doesn't have anything to do with randomly changing stuff just for change's sake.

      To be fair, we can look at the Wikipedia definition for conservatism too and see if there's a more charitable way to interpret it:

      Conservatism is a cultural, social, and political philosophy that seeks to promote and to preserve traditional institutions, practices, and values.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservatism

      I'd say the answer is basically no: this is just an indirect way to say "appeal to tradition fallacy".

      • If you think about it in terms of species adaptation, then liberalism is what allows our society to integrate changes and conservatism is what helps maintain stability. We need both and in different proportions at different times to adapt to our constantly changing social and physical environment.

276 comments