>>419760184 /b/ is revolutionary. It's managed to do something
that has never before been done in the history of human existence. It has
managed to use anonymity and a lack of a general category to remove the
social aspects of communication. Here, It doesn't matter how "cool" you are
or how many times you've gotten laid. Quite, frankly societal constraints cease
to matter to a certain extent, and what comes out in the process is pure
unadulterated uncensored ideas and expression with no regards to the
pre-existing system of power, legacies, and classics. Ironically even with
the recurrent themes of misogyny, homophobia and xenophobia, the /b/
manages to actually empower women, homosexuals, and people of different
ethnic origins though the fact that our perception of other's opinions, comments,
and ideas cannot be tainted by bias and discrimination. Perhaps I am a
nigger, perhaps I am a faggot. However, the revolutionary anonymity in
communication makes it impossible for you to know such and is impossible
to replicate outside of this amazing internet in a reasonable scale. The is no glory,
there is no bias, there is only creation, and ideas, and action here in this thread
we call /b/. Having any kind of identifier here heavily counteracts this effect.