I have to agree with this poster.

I'm an experienced developer but reasonably new to Go.

Frankly nothing about the subreddit indicates that it's official. I suggest 
that the Go team withdraw from moderating the subreddit if they do not 
agree with recent events on reddit itself. Leave a note in the sidebar that 
it's an unofficial subreddit and allow the reddit /r/golang community to 
moderate.

Unnecessary politicking is unsavoury and makes Go feel like an unwelcoming 
community. I simply don't see how proposing to punish the community around 
your programming language is appropriate or considerate.

On Friday, November 25, 2016 at 5:39:41 AM UTC, n8he...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> This is my first post here. I wouldn't have known about the thread if it 
> weren't for r/golang. 
>
> I'm interested in learning more about the language, but as a very green 
> hobbyist without much free time, much of my Go news comes from interesting 
> tidbits that come up in gotimefm, hacker news, and most of all r/golang. 
>
> I would definitely be bummed if r/golang went away. 
>
>

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