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Too much US politic posts and Communities in the last weeks?

I have been more than 2 years on Lemmy and I have had an amazing experience with everything, but lately I see more and more US politics on all! I also see new communities regarding US politics + newspapers about the US, cross-posting same article in multiple communities and so on.

It's only me who thinks this is too much? Anyone else that have noticed it?

38 comments
  • I live in Los Angeles county. Right now it's kinda all I can think about.... But I understand our political crisis can totally harsh your vibes or whatever.

  • I think between Elon Musk departing Washington and the alarming fascist escalation in Los Angeles, it's kind of to be expected.

    But note that (at least on my instance, lemmy.world) you can click the post's drop-down menu and hide posts you don't want to see again, so that helps somewhat.

  • Yeah there’s been an influx lately of it it is getting a little annoying. A lot of times it seems to be a single user that will post the same thing across so many things so I’ll just block them. I block the users that are just news organizations as well

  • Piefed has a content filter to remove it. Signing up for piefed.social, one of the first questions it asks is "How tired are you of the Trump/Musk spam?". I just checked my filters, and the only 2 words are "trump" and "musk", and I have not seen a single lick of US politics in any of my browsing over the last week or so since joining. (EDIT: Lemmy doesn't have content filters, I was looking at the wrong info, sorry!)

    I get my news elsewhere and I'm part of local political action groups. One of the reasons I left Reddit a couple weeks back was to get away from the constant dooming. Even after meticulously curating my communities, it was hard to get away from. There's a time and place for worrying about news and politics, but anywhere and everywhere 24/7 isn't it.

    I can see how it could be a problem if you WANT to see a little bit of it, though.

    • After a quick search, Lemmy does appear to have similar content filters available, but I don't know exactly where to find them.

      Lemmy does not have built-in keywords filters. Another area where Piefed is better.

      • You're right, I stand corrected. I was looking at a post on Lemmy.World that was a changelog that mentioned adding keyword content filters.

        Turns out that it was a changelog for a particular mobile Lemmy client (Summit).

        My quick glance wasn't quite deep enough, it seems.

  • I understand the cross-posting issue, it's something that comes with a federated discussion format and I don't think anyone has come up with a great way to solve it without such a distributed effort. It's ironic that before when there were so few instances (before and during the first Reddit migration) there was a concern that without cross-posting a lot there wouldn't be enough growth and some communities might die out if they happened to be on a single failing instance. I'd rather have too much activity than none at all, at least you can filter or block the worse ones.

  • After reading through this thread, I want to mention that I'm feeling the same way as you and with the amount of politics and uncomfortable discussions I'm seeing, I find that I prefer to go find discussions that are more relaxing instead. This also kind of also reminds me of the ideas of a community which I'm not able to think of what to call it, or I would probably have created it already. Someone did give me an explanation in DM that I think fits it, but still not sure what to call it.

    I have been finding myself uncomfortable with a lot of things posted in politics, News, Global News, and some in Not The Onion, Memes. I'm also finding myself not wanting to look inside the technology community because I'm not interested in the latest and the greatest shit since it feels like we are heading for a disaster. Right now, I'm just thinking of ideas on what can be done to make it better, block a lot of the negative stuff out, and focus on getting back into a more peaceful wilderness-like area.

38 comments