Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would like to know how Nextdoor reviewers are selected. A prolific local troublemaker on Nextdoor lives in our neighborhood. This person routinely agitates, publicly shames even children, manufactures situations, and frankly lies—all to get the attention that evades them through normal human interaction. Yet somehow is now a reviewer. Now the person can post whatever they feel like with impunity. Absurd.
+1 The people on Nextdoor the most tend to be the most toxic. Then they get rewarded as reviewers or "convo starters."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All it is is reports of “gunshots” and lost dogs
And cars driving slowly through the neighborhood and bees nests and bug bites and complaints about weed trimmers and…
"How deadly poisonous is this snake?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All it is is reports of “gunshots” and lost dogs
And cars driving slowly through the neighborhood and bees nests and bug bites and complaints about weed trimmers and…
Anonymous wrote:All it is is reports of “gunshots” and lost dogs
Anonymous wrote:I would like to know how Nextdoor reviewers are selected. A prolific local troublemaker on Nextdoor lives in our neighborhood. This person routinely agitates, publicly shames even children, manufactures situations, and frankly lies—all to get the attention that evades them through normal human interaction. Yet somehow is now a reviewer. Now the person can post whatever they feel like with impunity. Absurd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh, all the far-right conspiracy theory conservatives in my neighborhood use it to trash liberals, and spread fake news. It sucks.
Hmm. We have the reverse in our neighborhood. Apparently we aren’t supposed to disapprove of pumpkin smashers.
We were advised not to participate in Halloween at all, it invites in the Devil
(yes, this was a NextDoor thread in my neighborhood this week)
Anonymous wrote:I dropped NextDoor. I found out way more about our neighbors than I ever wanted to know...namely, that most of them are insane.
The clincher for me was some woman in a neighboring area who took to NextDoor to complain that other people weren't smiling at her or giving a greeting when they passed while walking their dogs. So I get it because I always greet people when I walk the dogs but that's the way I am, and I too have noticed that I usually am the person giving the smile and greeting first. However, I also understand if others are using that time for reflection or to zone or to decompress and they don't want to smile at me or greet me. I don't find it offensive and I don't feel affronted.
Anyway, this woman went onto NextDoor with a litany of complaints about these other people and really made a big deal about how offended she was. In response, a bunch of people jumped in to express their umbrage at how rude others are. Somewhere in the midst of this, two people posted that perhaps the other people (the non-smilers, non-greeters) should be given the benefit of the doubt, and that perhaps the poster could just let them be. Let me tell you, those two people were completely blasted out of the water by the responses. The vitriol against the two was completely uncalled for.
Anyway no more NextDoor for me. Good riddance to bad rubbish as my grandma used to say.
Anonymous wrote:We live in the SOuth and Nextdoor is awesome for finding out which of your neighbors are racist. Posts include things like "I saw a black man walking through our neighborhood the other night. Surely he doesn't live here . . .. "
In case they're too lazy to fly a Confederate Flag, we have Nextdoor so we can still identify them.
Signed, your local "immigrant"