That's right every programming language now has rulers and is a community, these days.
Moderators are required: to police the tone of conversation, to keep communication within the bounds of decency. The only "prejudice" and 'bile" that is allowed is when it is used to challenge those Toxic Ones who are uncomfortable with the fact that open sourced technology has some how become conflated with political human relations. The "C-community" sounds no less ridiculous to me than the 'Calculus Community". Nobody of course is surprised that there is a Flat Earth Society. As you say, we don't want "boogy words" or "boogy" people saying untoward things that might impinge on the ego of fragile millennials. The employee handbook is quite clear on this: if an elder is offended, then the message must be deemed offensive. The judges' parallel justice verdict must be final on this to save further waste of energy, and to reduce the 'harm' that may follow. The millennial generation are the ones who could not possibly have built the first programming languages since they required free-ranging experimentation, failure and "offensive" communication. It's really funny to people like me who were indoctrinated during the cold war period - to resist communism - to now see kids perfectly happy adopting North Korean style 'happy communities' where constant clapping and smiling is required to maintain the outward manifestation of order and respect.
