So as the title plainly states, I plan to deactivate the
comments section of my blog posts moving forward. (Previously posted comments
will remain intact.) While I don’t feel obligated to offer an explanation—after
all, it is my blog, and I am free to
format it any way I choose—I thought that it might be worthwhile to share my
reasoning as to why.
When I first started blogging in the mid-’00s (on
LiveJournal, before moving things over to this site), there was a strong
community element to blogging. Most of the people commenting on my posts had
blogs of their own, often similarly focused on transgender, queer, feminist,
and/or social justice matters. I would read their blogs, and they would read
mine. Sometimes we’d cross-post each other’s pieces, or write posts about one
another’s posts (linking to the original piece, plus adding our own thoughts on
the subject). And sometimes, we’d continue the discussion in the comments
section using our names/blogging-handles so that it was easy for everyone
involved to follow who was saying what to whom. It was by no means an “internet
utopia”—fierce disagreements and flame wars often broke out. But it did feel
more like an actual conversation, perhaps because we all had “skin in the game”
(i.e., as activists, as members of overlapping online communities).
I’m sure these sorts of internet conversations are still
happening, but they seem to have migrated more to Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, and
other venues. And maybe they still exist in certain corners of the blogosphere.
But they hardly ever occur on this blog these days, partly because of how the
world has changed, and partly because of how I have changed. By which I mean, I
am no longer just “Julia the blogosphere community member” anymore. People now tend
to see me (for better or worse) as “Julia Serano the author,” and this, to some
extent, affects how others react to things that I write here and elsewhere (once again, for better
or worse).
As my public profile has grown, so has the public’s
awareness of trans people. Which basically means that I am a far more visible and accessible target for people who detest trans people than I ever was in the past (i.e., back when the only people who read my blog were other activists). And people who don't like what I have to say on more mainstream platforms (e.g., Salon, Medium, The Guardian, to name a few recent ones) will sometimes seek me out here.
I recently joked with a friend that I only ever get five types
of comments on my blog these days. They are (from most frequent to least
frequent):
1) Angry/insulting/dismissive comments, which (nine times
out of ten) are from “Anonymous.” These are most frequently (and vehemently) penned
by TERFs, and to a lesser extent, religious/political conservatives who
are ideologically opposed to trans people and activism. Other times, the angry/insulting/dismissive
comments come from groups who are opposed to women or feminism (e.g., MRAs,
GG-ers who dismiss me as a “SJW”), or from other activists who hold decidedly
different views from me, and who try to “win the argument” via ad hominem
attacks. I feel justified deleting all of these sorts of comments.
2) Spambots, who remark (if you’ll allow me to paraphrase): “I
really found your post to be quite interesting! And by the way, here are a few unrelated
links I’d like to embed in your comments section.” I feel justified marking
these as spam.
3) ‘Thank you’s from actual people who enjoyed the post in
question. I’m always grateful to receive (and approve) these comments.
4) Actual people who start with a “thank you” or
“interesting piece” remark, but then spend a paragraph (or 2 or 3 or 5 or 9)
talking about something tangential or barely related to my post. On the one
hand, these are real comments by real people, so I usually approve them. But in
the more extreme cases, it feels like the person in question is simply using my
post as a platform to express their opinions about various things, even if they
have nothing to do with the matters I am discussing.
5) Respectful (i.e., non-flaming) questions or disagreements
directly related to my post. I generally approve these, and try to write follow
up replies if/when I can, although frankly, sometimes I am too busy to do so. In
a few instances, these exchanges have been enlightening or rewarding, whether
we find common ground, or win one another over, or simply agree to disagree.
But increasingly (as more transgender-unaware people stumble across my blog), the
questions and disagreements tend to fall more into the “Trans 101” realm—which
is fine, everybody has to start somewhere. It’s just that what I write
about—the topics that interest and concern me the most—are more at a Trans 201 (or
maybe 301?) level. And frankly, I’d rather be working on my next blog post or
book chapter right now than spending my time explaining (for the umpteenth
time) why the word cisgender is useful and not an insult.
Upon contemplating those five categories, it became obvious
to me that the drawbacks of maintaining my comments section far outweigh the
benefits. And the idea of *not* having to field through those 2 or 3 or 5 or 9
vitriolic and often outright transphobic/misogynistic comments that I’ve had to
moderate (i.e., read and subsequently reject) each week or so—in and of itself—would
be a much welcome respite.
A recent commenter (whose inflammatory comment I rejected) accused
me of “not being able to handle dissent,” which I find laughable. I see dissent
everywhere. People tag me on their Facebook exchanges, @-me on their Tweets, and
sometimes send emails directly to me, telling me what they think of what I’ve
written (sometimes grateful, sometimes dissenting, sometimes outright hateful).
So this isn’t about me not tolerating dissent. It’s about dissenters needing to
appreciate that, while they have the right to dislike what I write, they aren’t
entitled to have their dissenting opinions appear on my own website.
If something I have written here inspires you, or doesn’t sit well with you, feel free to post your thoughts on Facebook, tweet about it Twitter, tumble about it on Tumblr, and so on. You can even start your own blog if you wish—Blogspot & WordPress are both free options. I wish you all the best with that!
[note: If you appreciate this piece and want to see more like it, please check out my Patreon page]
If something I have written here inspires you, or doesn’t sit well with you, feel free to post your thoughts on Facebook, tweet about it Twitter, tumble about it on Tumblr, and so on. You can even start your own blog if you wish—Blogspot & WordPress are both free options. I wish you all the best with that!
[note: If you appreciate this piece and want to see more like it, please check out my Patreon page]