Ask Lemmy
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To me, though, that sounds like calling the police to resolve a mild disagreement. It just escalates situations more than needed and creates drama where things could have otherwise been settled quietly by simply letting the content be buried and ignored.
I believe in using best judgment with downvotes and not simply using it as an "I disagree" button (which is why I did not downvote your comments, as some inconsiderate people seem to have done), but I do believe they have a place. They're a form of community self-moderation that help keep discussions on topic and civil. I only really use the report button for content that I actually feel is somehow dangerous or detrimental that needs to be removed.
But I also do completely understand the instances out there that do choose to remove the downvote button entirely (check out blahaj.zone for one option if that's what you're looking for), and I know that is a preferable way for many to use Lemmy. I have an alt on blahaj myself, but I prefer being on instances with downvotes because it's nice to see bigoted/heinous content be buried when moderators don't or refuse to step in.
I think they're downvoting my comments to try to be funny in this particular situation.
If people used the downvote like you suggest, it would be less of a problem. But speaking of policing, there is no real policing of votes. There's just a button.
You give people a downvote button, and they'll simply go through threads going up, down, up, down, up, down. It's like they double their vote and it drowns out any more ethical downvotes. It hasn't happened much on Lemmy, but it happens as a matter of course on Reddit. It will eventually be here, too, if Lemmy continues to grow. There is nothing to stop it.
Besides, apart from your point about essentially unmoderated areas, I think the upvote button is enough to achieve all the goals you listed. And if it's unmoderated, it's going to become unusably toxic no matter how people vote.