>>514677465
>The space has increasingly become stagnant under the weight of their political grudges and outdated takes.
>The board thrives on rapid-fire, chaotic discourse driven by the current generation’s memes and language, to shift online trends; something millennials often fail to keep up with, leading to repetitive talking points and culture clashes that drag the same conversations into 300 replies.
>Millennials weren't 30 when they used the board; they were the age when they fit for the culture at the time, that's when the site was at it's best.
>By stepping aside, they would allow disenfranchised, fighting age young men to shape the board’s identity in line with the evolving culture, rather than anchoring it to the political baggage of the early 2000s and 2010s. This isn’t ageism, it’s just giving the new generation the room to run the asylum they already inhabit.
>
>Look, I’m just being real here millennials over 30 have got to go. Every time one of these substitute boomers show up on /pol/, it’s a dumpster fire.