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See all MNHQ comments on this thread

Are Mumsnet rules just for the little people?

913 replies

Penandink · 12/02/2012 14:54

"Troll cries make MNers look silly. If you think the person is not real, you don't have to post - nobody has a gun at your head! If you suspect the person is false and trying to hurt, or get money, tell MNHQ! How terrible if genuine people - people in trouble, people at the end of their tether - come here as their last hope for some help and advice, are savaged and go off again, feeling terrible and that they don't have anywhere left to turn to?"

www.mumsnet.com/info/netiquette

There is a very real problem on Mumsnet that there are a small group of posters who wilfully ignore this "rule" as and when it suits them. I think the problem is now institutionalised in MN as being the norm and acceptable.

These people just make stuff up about people they've never met. Once they do this other people pile in believing the bullshit, and then acting on it. The troll-hunters also don't seem to stop and think how their assumptions might affect - or even damage the rest of the site. Lets summarise their position: " I am OUTRAGED and APPALLED by something that may or may not have happened but can't be proved, because although I say it did, I won't provide any evidence"

Sometimes this place is more like a bear pit rather than a community of support and OBJECTIVE thinking and response.

They have their bit of fun and when their target gives up - off course they do having been hounded unmercifully - the Hunter claim that proves they were a troll. Disagree with the unters and sooner rather than later they will accuse you of being a man (their ultimate insult) or a troll. A suggestion that you should leave the site usually follows.

The "silent majority" don't put up with this. They just leave...

OP posts:
Maryz · 13/02/2012 21:17

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

redlac · 13/02/2012 21:20

Portofino I don't want to be a troll can I be a mole instead?

AitchTwoOhOneTwo · 13/02/2012 21:28

totally agree. although could do with a few more damascene moments and acts of contrition from the worst offenders when they are finished reading the more sensible stuff. Grin

i just htink this place is BIG now and there's no point wanting it to be one way or another. it is what it is. a pure rammy.

TuftyFinch · 13/02/2012 21:47

Is this the right forum to ask about a knitting conundrum?

everlong · 13/02/2012 21:48

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

AitchTwoOhOneTwo · 13/02/2012 21:49

lolol

shabbapinkfrog · 13/02/2012 21:57
Hullygully · 13/02/2012 22:06

Still really boring

TuftyFinch · 13/02/2012 22:12

I used to have an origami business.

Portofino · 13/02/2012 22:16

Hully, but this all made up remember? Surely you can post something exciting?

TuftyFinch · 13/02/2012 22:17

It folded.

everlong · 13/02/2012 22:18

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Portofino · 13/02/2012 22:20

Talking of knitting, dd got a kit for Xmas. Well I say kit, it was like needles and um, wool, and a whole book of horrendously complicated instructions on how to knit a shit bag. Anyone ever tried to teach a stubborn 7yo to knit? Don't ....is my advice.

AuntingCarse · 13/02/2012 22:24

Tufty that is so shockingly bad and I am ashamed to say it made me guffaw a bit Grin

Portofino - that is very very wise advice.

TuftyFinch · 13/02/2012 22:27

My dad told me it tonight on the phone. He tells me a joke every night. This was better then most.

Portofino you have my sympathy. I let DS (5) and DD (3) press the pedal on the sewing machine. They'd have done well in a Grand Prix.

AuntingCarse · 13/02/2012 22:38

That Terry is a funny chap Wink

nenevomito · 13/02/2012 22:53

DS wants me to teach him how to knit. It would help if I knew how to knit myself. Bit of a non-starter really.

TuftyFinch · 13/02/2012 22:56

Auntingcarse yes, very.

babyheave just say you have to be 10 to be able to knit. It's the law.

Portofino · 13/02/2012 23:00

I am very shite at knitting. I can do it and all, but the end results are doomed to failure.

nenevomito · 13/02/2012 23:01

Well that gives me a few years to learn and/or for him to change his mind. Grin

nenevomito · 13/02/2012 23:02

To be fair to me, I can do the plain knitting stitch and once knitted a scalf.

Thats almost craft that is.

TuftyFinch · 13/02/2012 23:07

babyheave your knitting skill is on a par with mine. I would like to knit a jumper but I think it would be easier to go to the moon.

Maryz · 13/02/2012 23:25

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

AuntingCarse · 13/02/2012 23:26

I can knit, but only when someone has done the casting on thingy wotsit.

I can French knit all by myself though. A master skill I acquired at about 5. It's never served me any real use, sadly. But Cat's Cradle is something I CAN do.

AuntingCarse · 13/02/2012 23:26

I suspect, Maryz, that she may be heading for a Sainthood.

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