To give you some background
@frodoh, the only reason #politics exists in the slack is to keep political discourse out of the rest of the slack team. The slack team explicitly avoids tight moderation of #politics because it exists as a containment channel.
That said, a goal of the moderation team is to make sure that the slack team (and by extension, devanooga) is a place for people to have on-topic _and off-topic_ discussions that exchange and challenge ideas without discrediting individuals or resulting to name calling, intentional provocation, etc.
The problem that we have with this is that slack does not provide very good moderation tools. Our options are to flat out ban someone's account or talk them into doing what is best for everyone else. There's no in-between. We can technically kick someone out of a channel, but they are free to rejoin it.
Also, given that all of devanooga's resources are provided to you and everyone else for free, and none of us make a penny in our roles administrating/moderating it, please try to be more civil than throwing comments like `(mostly dead)` around about something that we are trying to do to help everyone here. I get that you are trying to make a point, but you can do that without a curmudgeon tone.
To speak to the problem at hand, at the risk of paraphrasing what has already been said: the benefit of the forums idea is that we are then given some better moderation tools to help _everyone involved_. Sometimes it just requires giving people a bit of a cool off period so that they can reset.
Unless I'm completely hallucinating 99% of interactions in #politics are civil, albeit sometimes heated - and that especially came to a head again post-election.
While I'm sure it does seem like that, not all complaints are expressed in public. Often, people write the moderation team members directly to voice their concerns.
I definitely take blame in allowing recent events to make some people uncomfortable, as I was expressing to other moderators that the post-election time-frame would be touchy and that we should have compassion for people who are upset about the results. That potentially caused some hesitation in acting more quickly BECAUSE our moderation tools are so limited on slack that they are basically black/white with no shades of grey.
Now, with all of that said: It does seem that me and Will are the only two that are really interested in moving #politics to the forum (of those that have chimed in). It's quite obvious that the ability to moderate is the driving factor for that. If the forums are a bridge too far, then I would prefer we write up some Code of Conduct rules that are specific to #politics and enforce them with a heavy hand.