annegreen

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] annegreen 2 points 1 year ago
2
What happened in Noah’s tent? (self.progressivechristian)
 

How would you react if you found out a family member walked in on you and saw you naked while you were passed out drunk?

I imagine I would be embarrassed and would make a mental note to hold back on the beers next time.

Most characters on a sitcom would probably conclude that to restore balance to the relationship, they’d need to see their family member drunk and naked.

Apparently, Noah’s (yes, the same guy who built the ark) reaction is to curse his family member’s son, and all of his descendants.

Genesis 9 contains one of the most interesting stories I think you can find in the Old Testament. Regardless of whether you read this story as historical or legendary, it doesn’t feel like all the pieces in this story add up. The punishment does not seem to fit the crime. For many readers, we’re left wondering: what exactly happened in Noah’s tent?

Reading 1

The first possibility is that what’s written in the text is really all there is to it. Noah gets drunk on home-brewed wine, falls asleep naked in his tent, and Ham (Noah’s son) goes in, sees Noah naked, and tells his brothers, who walk in backwards and place a blanket over their father. When Noah learns what Ham did, he curses - not his son Ham, but Ham’s son and Noah’s grandson - Canaan to be a slave to the descendants of his uncles.

It’s definitely possible that this is the full story, and for many modern readers, that’s the default reading of the text. But if that’s the case, it feels like Noah’s reaction is both unnecessarily harsh and misdirected. A lifetime of slavery for his grandson because his son caught a glimpse of his penis? Come on. But there are other interpretations of the text which choose to read between the lines a little bit more.

Reading 2

One ancient rabbinic reading of the text is that when Ham entered Noah’s tent, he didn’t just see his father naked - he sexually assaulted him. This certainly escalates the seriousness of Ham’s crime and makes Noah’s furious response a bit more warranted. However, it still feels misdirected. Why curse Canaan instead of Ham?

Reading 3

Another ancient rabbinic reading is that Ham actually castrated his father while he was drunk and unconscious. Yikes. Again, if this is the case, Noah’s anger is now warranted, and there’s a stronger reason for cursing Canaan rather than Ham. Canaan was Ham’s fourth son, and by castrating his father, Ham robbed Noah of his own fourth son. However, it feels to me like this reads heavily between the lines. There doesn’t seem to be any kind of euphemism indicating that this is the case.

Reading 4

A more modern reading of the story compares a verse in this story with a passage in Leviticus.

“And Ham, the father of Canaan, saw the nakedness of his father, and told his two brothers outside.” Genesis 9:22

“You shall not uncover the nakedness of your father's wife; it is the nakedness of your father.” Leviticus‬ ‭18‬:‭8‬

Leviticus uses the same phrase found in Genesis as a euphemism to mean having sexual intercourse with your own mother. So, this reading concludes the Ham raped not his father but his mother while Noah lay drunk and unconscious. Again, this would make Noah’s anger more warranted, and could explain the curse on Canaan - if Canaan was born to Ham by his own mother.

What do you think? Do you buy any of these interpretations? Or do you think something else happened entirely?

[–] annegreen 2 points 1 year ago

Thanks for engaging with the question. The only thing I would push back from my perspective is that I don’t think it’s so much about applying the principles of the Bible in your life as it is about allowing the Holy Spirit to shape your life.

[–] annegreen 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I sometimes use the language that sin is an “eye problem” that leads to an “I problem.” The Bible often uses language that sin is a force or disease which affects and infects us. And yes, I believe that we’re only healed of this disease by the work of the Holy Spirit.

[–] annegreen 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I think “conversation” is the key word here. It’s a means of engaging in dialogue with our predecessors, who wrestled with many of the same questions we do today.

These days, I interpret the idea of “sola scriptura” to be more closely related to the doctrine of the priesthood of all believers than the infallibility of the Bible. I recognize that this may not be what Martin Luther had in mind, but I’m comfortable asserting that we don’t need to rely on the clergy to interpret scripture for us. I don’t think it’s wise to reject the wisdom of the church or to read the Bible outside of community.

[–] annegreen 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Some traditions would argue that the concepts of original sin and total depravity necessitate that, as sinful people, everything we do, we do in sin, regardless of intention or knowledge.

For the most part, I reject that line of thinking. I think sin usually does involve some level of awareness. Again, I view sin primarily as the dehumanizing or objectifying of others. It’s viewing people not as other souls with inherent worth, but as a means of achieving your own desires. I think often, we are aware to some degree that we do this. But then, it could be argued that we may sometimes do this without realization.

0
The gospel in one sentence (self.progressivechristian)
 

If you were to try to boil the gospel message down to one sentence, what would it be?

For me, it’s: “Christ participates in our humanity so that we can partake in his divinity.”

[–] annegreen 1 points 1 year ago

Crypt of the NecroDancer is a good one

[–] annegreen 15 points 1 year ago (1 children)

This is a bit of a strange question, because an amendment is just that - an amendment. You don’t list amendments in your first draft of a constitution, you list articles. Amendments are changes made to the constitution after it’s ratified.

[–] annegreen 12 points 2 years ago

Not always, but often, making unpopular changes is precisely what the executive is being paid to do. Their job is to implement these changes, make sure that they are the one everyone gets upset with, and then take that anger with them when they leave.

6
A Guide to Wealthsimple Fees (self.wealthsimple)
submitted 2 years ago by annegreen to c/wealthsimple
 

Here’s an overview of all the fees you can expect to pay to Wealthsimple, ever.

Commission Fees

None. Wealthsimple has zero commission fees. This means that you can trade stocks back and forth all day, without paying a dime.

For comparison, Questrade’s direct investing platform charges a fee of $0.01/share… with a minimum charge of $4.95. So, you’re really paying $4.95/trade unless you’re trading more than 495 shares in a single transaction. There’s also an upper limit of $9.95. Questrade lets you buy ETFs for free but applies the same fees as above to selling ETFs. At RBC Direct Investing, you’ll pay $9.95/trade, or $6.95/trade when you make at least 150 trades/quarter (an average of 1.6 trades/day).

Foreign Exchange Fees

Whenever you convert CAD to USD, or USD to CAD, you’ll be charged a 1.5% conversion fee. For comparison, the typical foreign transaction fee on a credit card is 2.5%, though some don’t charge any foreign transaction fees at all.

USD Subscription Fees

If you’re a Wealthsimple Core client (meaning you hold less than $100,000 in assets with Wealthsimple), you’ll pay $10.00/month if you choose to open a USD account with them. This is completely optional. If you’re a Wealthsimple Premium or Generational client, the USD account is free.

Management Fees

Wealthsimple charges a management fee for their managed accounts - they do not apply to self-directed accounts. The fee is 0.5% if you hold less than $100,000 in assets with Wealthsimple, 0.4% if you have $100,000-500,000 in assets, and as low as 0.2% if you’ve got at least $10,000,000 in assets (hey, good for you). This management fee is on an annual basis, so if you had a managed portfolio of $10,000, you would pay Wealthsimple $50/year.

For comparison, Questrade has a management fee of 0.25% for accounts with less than $100,000, and 0.20% for accounts with more than that. RBC has a management fee of 0.5% for their managed portfolios, regardless of account balance.

Options Fees

Whenever you create an options contract, you pay $2 USD. For comparison, Questrade charges $1.00/contract, in addition to a $9.95 commission fee. RBC charges $1.25/contact, plus a $9.95 commission fee.

Instant Withdrawal Fees

Normally, Wealthsimple takes a few days to withdraw your money to an external account. If you choose to do an instant withdrawal, you’ll pay 2.5% on the amount you’re withdrawing.

Crypto Trading Fees

You’ll pay 1.5-2% fees whenever you trade crypto.

Bonus: Management Expense Ratios

These fees aren’t dictated by Wealthsimple, but I thought I’d add them for completeness. Individual stocks don’t have any fees associated with them, but when you purchase an ETF, there’ll be a management expense ratio (MER) attached to it. You’ll have to investigate the ETFs you intend to purchase to find out what this fee is. Like management fees, an MER is an annual fee.

[–] annegreen 1 points 2 years ago

This is definitely the most reasonable approach.

[–] annegreen 5 points 2 years ago

Aye, aye, captain.

[–] annegreen 8 points 2 years ago

I agree with the direction you’re suggesting. I think it may also be helpful to identify a few key issues that would require more than a simple majority vote to overturn.

In particular, we’ve already gotten multiple posts on defederating from various instances, and on clearing our defederation list. My suggestion is that something like once per month we hold a vote on defederation issues. A 2/3 majority vote to defederate/refederate must be achieved to pass.

[–] annegreen 0 points 2 years ago

I actually haven’t heard about that podcast. Thanks for sharing!

2
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by annegreen to c/wealthsimple
 

Very broadly speaking, there are two basic approaches to investing: active and passive. So what’s the difference?

What it’s not

Some people might (incorrectly) suggest that an active investor is someone who makes frequent trades (up to multiple times a day), while a passive investor is someone who makes infrequent trades (once a month or less). But frequency of trades really isn’t the best way to understand active vs passive investing.

Others might (also incorrectly) suggest that an active investor is someone who handpicks their stocks based on market conditions every time they buy, while a passive investor is someone who buys the same securities repeatedly. This, also, isn’t the best way way to understand active vs passive investing.

What it is

In simple terms, an active investor is someone who is trying to beat the market, while a passive investor is someone who is trying to replicate the market (or a market segment). The movement of a market is measured by weighing all the individual stocks in that market and averaging out their direction. So when you hear that the TSX is down 2%, it means that while some of the stocks may have gone up and others gone down, overall, the average stock price fell 2%.

As of writing this post, the TSX is up 4.61% compared to a year ago. A passive investor looks at that number and says “yeah, I could settle for that.” An active investor says “nah, I could do better.”

How it works

Again, the key to all of this is that a stock market’s average return is literally just the combined return of all the stocks on that market. This means that if you bought a portfolio 1 year ago of all the stocks on the TSX, weighted by their market share, your return over the past year would be 4.61%. It’s really just junior high level math.

So, a passive investor chooses to guarantee themselves a return equal to the average market return. An active investor attempts to predict which stocks will outperform the market average. If the average return of their portfolio is higher than the average return of the market - boom, they won.

This is why the first two definitions of active vs passive investing are faulty. An active investor could buy $10,000 worth of a few stocks and hold for a year, in the hopes that they outperform the market, while a passive investor could buy $20 worth of the market every day for a year. Frequency doesn’t matter.

Similarly, an active investor might keep buying Tesla over and over, while a passive investor will continually rebalance their portfolio to align with the market.

So which is better?

The answer is a little bit complicated (but only a little bit). If you want to get rich quick, passive investing ain’t gonna do it for you. But for my money, I’d choose passive investing over active investing any day. And that’s because it turns out humans are awful at predicting what stocks will over-perform. In fact, over the past 20 years, about 90-95% of active investors failed to beat the market.

The situation gets even worse when you consider that a lot of active investors are actually paying someone else a management fee to pick stocks for them, which takes even more off the top. On the other hand, there are plenty of low-cost ETFs which attempt to replicate segments of the market, like the well-know-and-loved VGRO or XGRO. (portfolios like these are called “index funds”).

Of course, the real answer is that we should all just keep buying GameStop.

7
What is sin? (self.progressivechristian)
 

I can still vividly recall my elementary Sunday school teacher teaching us a “kid-friendly” definition of sin:

Sin is anything you think, do, or say that makes God upset.

As a young child, this notion filled me with a sense of dread. What if I unintentionally said or did something that upset God? And for years this fear lingered because the reasons behind God's displeasure seemed more or less… arbitrary.

Traditional Western Christianity usually defines sin somewhere along the lines of transgression against the divine will. But what does the divine will entail? Are certain actions arbitrarily placed on a naughty list? Levitical laws, such as those prohibiting the mixing of fabrics or trimming beards, can contribute to this perception of arbitrariness.

But to me, the idea that sin is arbitrary ultimately means that there is not such thing as the Good, which I reject. So, I propose a different perspective — a perspective that views sin as dehumanization. I hold the belief that sin does involve transgression against the divine will, but that God's will is to redeem creation and restore true humanity, where every person bears the image of God.

For this reason, I propose that we can assess an act's sinfulness by examining whether it humanizes or dehumanizes individuals.

Let's consider examples: Acts of compassion, empathy, and justice affirm the dignity and worth of others, nurturing their humanity. In contrast, actions rooted in prejudice, discrimination, or oppression strip away the humanity of others, dehumanizing them.

Now, some people may prefer to view sin through the more “objective” lens of biblical commandments over the subjectivity of humanizing vs dehumanizing acts. However, I am confident that viewing sin through the lens of dehumanization brings us closer to the divine will, because we acknowledge the transformative power of our actions and our responsibility to foster the flourishing of all.

By embracing an understanding of sin as dehumanization, we embrace the ideals of justice, love, and the restoration of our shared humanity.

4
A Guide to Account Types (self.wealthsimple)
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by annegreen to c/wealthsimple
 

Non-registered accounts (previously personal accounts)

This is your basic, run-of-the-mill investing account. Nothing really special about it. You’ll pay taxes on all dividends, interest, and capital gains from investments inside this account, and be eligible for a tax credit if you experience capital losses. It’s the baseline to which everything else is compared.

Advantages: The only real advantage to a non-registered account is its flexibility. You can deposit, withdraw, and trade within it as often as you damn well please.

Disadvantages: The obvious disadvantage of a non-registered account is that you don’t get any tax incentives.

When should you use this account? If you’re into day-trading (good luck), this is probably the best account for you to use. If your strategy is to buy-and-hold, then you should probably only use this account if you have no contribution room left in any of the relevant registered accounts listed below.

TFSA (Tax-Free Savings Account)

Calling this a “savings account” is a bit misleading, because a TFSA can hold any investment that a non-registered account can. The TFSA is like a magic circle you draw around some of your investments that make them invisible to the CRA. You won’t pay taxes on interest, dividends, or capital gains, and you won’t get tax credits on capital losses. You’ll also be putting post-tax money into a TFSA, which means you don’t get anything back during tax season.

Advantages: Being able to invest without taxes means you’ll be able to save much faster than if you had to pay taxes. You get to keep more of your money. Beautiful.

Disadvantages: It’s illegal to day-trade in a TFSA, so don’t even think about it. There’s also a contribution limit for your TFSA that starts accumulating the year you turn 18, even if you don’t open a TFSA until years later. The contribution counter doesn’t reset until January 1 of the next year, so if you deposit $1,000, immediately withdrew it, and then deposit it again, you’ll have used $2,000 of your contribution room, even though your balance has only grown by $1,000.

When should you use this account? A TFSA is a great vehicle for mid-to-long-term savings. There are no rules about making withdrawals, so it’s flexible enough to use for saving for education, a down payment, retirement, or a backpacking trip across Europe. If you have contribution room, this should probably be your default account for investing.

RRSP (Registered Retirement Savings Plan)

The original tax-advantaged account. As the name suggests, an RRSP is primarily meant for retirement savings, though it does have allowances for withdrawing from it for education and down-payments. Your deposits into an RRSP are supposed to be pre-tax, except for since most people never actually get to touch their pre-tax money, the government makes up the difference by adjusting your taxable income at tax season, meaning you get a bigger tax refund. The interest, dividends, and capital gains and losses in your RRSP aren’t taxed, however, withdrawing from your RRSP when you’re retired counts as taxable income, which means it’s basically a “save-now-pay-later” kind of situation.

Advantages: Like the TFSA, the big advantage of an RRSP is the tax incentives. It’s a great vehicle for retirement savings.

Disadvantages: The RRSP has some restrictions on withdrawals, which makes it harder to access your money once you’ve deposited. If you toss $5,000 into your RRSP and then your car breaks down the next day, you’re out of luck. Additionally, you'll have contribution limits, which will be 18% of your annual income, up to $29,210.

When should you use this account? If you compare saving in an RRSP to saving in a TFSA, you’ll find that you end up with exactly the same amount of money at the end of the day, assuming your marginal tax rate doesn’t change between now and retirement. The RRSP wins out against the TFSA if your retirement income will be lower than your current income, and loses against the TFSA if your retirement income will be higher than your current income. As a rule of thumb, if your pre-tax income is more than $100,000, you should prioritize saving for retirement in an RRSP over a TFSA.

RESP (Registered Education Savings Plan)

It may come as a surprise to you to learn that this account is meant to help pay for education - though typically not your education. While you can open an RESP for yourself as an adult, the intention is that you’ll open an RESP for a beneficiary, usually your child/grandchild/niece/nephew. There are a few flavours of RESPs, but the big idea is that your investments get to grow tax-free until the beneficiary withdraws them for post-secondary education.

Advantages: In addition to tax-free growth, the government will also match 20% of your contributions, up to an annual limit of $500 (meaning you’ve contributed $2,500). And hey, free money is free money. With some extra cash, you’ll save money even faster than you would in a TFSA. Additionally, withdrawing your own contributions is tax-free, while withdrawals of the rest of the funds are taxed as income for your beneficiary, who, as a student, will likely have a low income, meaning they’ll pay little-to-no tax on the withdrawals.

Disadvantages: If your beneficiary chooses not to attend post-secondary, you still get your contributions back tax-free, but the government will take back their money, and you’ll have to pay a hefty tax rate on withdrawing the accumulated interest (your regular income tax rate plus 20%). So, your money won’t be totally lost, but you’ll be worse off than if you’d saved in a TFSA.

When should you use this account? The RESP is hands-down the best vehicle for saving for a loved one’s education. The only hangup is the penalties on getting your money back if they don’t attend post-secondary. You’ll have to decide if that risk is worth it for you or not.

FHSA (First Home Savings Account)

The new kid on the block, the FHSA combines the best of both worlds from the RRSP and the TFSA. Not only do your contributions reduce your taxable income, all your interest, dividends, and capital gains/losses are tax-free, and the withdrawals are tax-free, too! Of course, there’s the big restriction that you can only withdraw from the FHSA tax-free if you’re withdrawing for a down-payment on your first home.

Advantages: So many. Assuming you invest the refunds you get at tax season from contributing to this account, this is quite literally the fastest way to save for your first down payment. And get this - even if you end up not purchasing a home (or never intended to in the first place), you can staple this account onto your RRSP as an expansion, without using up any of your RRSP’s contribution limit.

Disadvantages: The only real downside to an FHSA is that you’ve only got 15 years from when you open it to withdraw your money. That’s a generous window, but if it takes you longer than 15 years to save your down payment, you’ll lose either have to send your savings to your RRSP or make a taxable withdrawal. Ouch. Additionally, there’s an annual contribution limit of $8,000, which carries forward for a single year, and doesn’t start accumulating until you open the FHSA, which means you actually want to open the FHSA before you intend to start saving for a down payment. There’s also a lifetime contribution limit of $40,000.

When should you use this account? The real question is when should you not use this account? If you’re at all interested in buying a home in the next 15 years, you should be opening up one of these bad boys ASAP. Even if you don’t buy a home, you get to add your investments to your retirement savings, so there’s really no losing here. Saving for short-to-mid-term goals other than buying a home should still be done in a TFSA or RESP, but otherwise, this should be the first account you’re contributing to.

Did I miss anything? Get anything wrong? Let me know in the comments and I’ll update the post.

5
Indigenous Peoples Day (self.progressivechristian)
 

To say that the Christian church has a checkered past with the indigenous people of North America would be putting it lightly. Inter-generational trauma caused by the church lingers in many indigenous communities today.

As a non-indigenous Christian living on treaty land, I want to take this opportunity to say a few things.

First, the actions of many members of the church towards indigenous people - both historically and today - have been nothing short of abusive, spiritually, emotionally, and physically. To deny that is to perpetuate a cycle of abuse. The church has largely failed to serve as a representative of Christ to indigenous people.

Second, I believe that the Christian church has much to learn from the spiritual practices of our indigenous neighbours. While I personally hold to the belief that Jesus Christ is the only image of the invisible God, I also believe that there is a multitude of ways of pursuing God. In particular, I believe that many indigenous communities depict a far more Christlike vision of communal, self-sacrificial life. In addition, I believe that the relationship indigenous peoples have with nature is much closer to the idyllic picture of Adam and Eve’s stewardship of creation than most western cultures.

So today, I acknowledge that I live on treaty land, the traditional and ancestral home of the Cree, Dene, Blackfoot, Saulteaux, and Nakota Sioux. I choose to honour the lives and stories of the indigenous peoples who came before me. And I claim my responsibility to foster healthier relationships with my indigenous neighbours today.

2
FHSA (self.wealthsimple)
submitted 2 years ago by annegreen to c/wealthsimple
 

Wealthsimple now has FHSA’s! Even if you don’t plan on buying a house immediately, you should open one soon, so that your contribution room begins growing.

 

The second campaign I ever ran was the Lost Mine of Phandelver (the first campaign was a homebrew that lasted exactly half a session and ended in a TPK). At the time, I was but a foolish DM who was still trying to remember the difference between an attack roll and a damage roll, gave players far too many actions during their turns, and played with awful homebrew like crit tables.

My party had made it to the ruined village of Thundertree. After the rogue snuck through some ~~bushes~~ twig blights and died, I had to introduce a Druid character to cast reincarnation on him so that we could keep momentum going.

As the Druid was bringing the rogue back to life, the monk decided to explore the village some more. He enters an abandoned home.

You look around you and see furniture weathered and worn, strewn about the room. Plants are growing up from cracks in the floor. There’s nothing of interest here.

The monk decided to climb onto the roof. With a great acrobatics skill, that’s easy. He asks to roll a perception check.

You see the decimated village of Thundertree all around you. Most of the buildings are falling apart. The only building that looks to be in moderate repair is a tower on a hill.

“What else do I see in the distance?”

Umm, let me check a map… Well, the town is surrounded by neverwinter wood. It’s autumn, so the leaves are an array of red, gold, and orange. You can see a river winding through the woods, and near the horizon where it enters the sea, with the city of neverwinter sparkling like a jewel in the setting sun.

“I take 5 turns to admire the view.”

You pause and appreciate your surroundings, letting yourself burn this image of beauty into your memory. Now what?

“I jump down into the bushes below.”

As you descend, you realize these are not bushes, but twig blights. They attack you - and get a critical hit! Let me roll on the crit table to see what happens to you.

They’ve gouged out your eyes.

You are now blind.

Well at least the last thing you did with your sight was admire a scenic landscape.

That was the day we stopped using crit tables.

1
That all shall be saved (self.progressivechristian)
 

Some verses from “that all shall be saved,” by David Bentley Hart, in support of universal salvation:

Romans 5:8-19 | So, then, just as through one transgression came condemnation for all human beings, so also through one act of righteousness came a rectification of life for all human beings; for, just as by the heedlessness of the one man the many were rendered sinners, so also by the obedience of the one the many will be rendered righteous.

Titus 2:11 | For the grace of God has appeared, giving salvation to all human beings …

Matthew 18:14 | So it is not a desire that occurs to your Father in the heavens that one of these little ones should perish.

1 John 2:2 | And he is atonement for our sins, and not only for ours, but for the whole cosmos.

1 Timothy 4:10 | we have hoped in a living God who is the savior of all human beings, especially those who have faith.

 

I’m a Canadian, so all of this has been happening at a distance for me. That being said, my heart breaks for all the people affected by this decision.

Holding to male-only leadership as being ordained by God has become an untenable perspective: biblically, logically, and experientially.

First, let’s ask the question - assuming that male-only leadership is God’s will - is there a functional difference between men and women which justifies this hierarchy?

If no, then we are left with the conclusion that God has arbitrarily created a hierarchical division between humanity. Personally, I don’t see how one can defend this view in light of the major biblical theme of equalization - that hills will be made low and valleys filled in, the wise will become foolish, and the foolish will be made wise.

If yes, then this functional difference must be in their ability to lead. If it’s anything else (e.g., the quality of having a penis), then it’s the same as being arbitrary.

So then, are women incapable of leadership?

It seems impossible to me to answer “yes” to this question. Clearly, there are plenty of women with the ability to lead. To deny that is ignorance.

Obviously, women are capable of leadership.

Of course, proponents of male-only leadership may argue that, on the whole, men are typically better at leadership than women, just as men are generally taller than women, though not every man is taller than every woman. But this completely breaks down, because it means that gender isn’t the difference after all - it’s simply ability. And if this is the case, then regardless of generalizations, individuals with the ability to lead should lead, whatever their gender.

There is no Jew or Greek, slave or free, male and female; since you are all one in Christ Jesus.

38
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by annegreen to c/agora
 

My understanding is that it’s not currently possibly to flair posts on Lemmy. However, I want to suggest that we establish some basic etiquette/format for posts, such as beginning a title with [Vote], [Discussion], [Poll], [Question], or something similar. I believe that this could help clarify content. This etiquette could be outlined in the sidebar.

In favour, reply: “Aye”

Against, reply: “Nay”

ETA: This would apply only to the Agora, not across the entire instance. Additionally, these would be superseded by flairs if and when that becomes a possibility.

view more: next ›