. . . you're saying argument isn't allowed.
Um, no, he's saying that your argument is silly and that the topic itself is not worth arguing over. He's expressing an opinion, too, not issuing an order.
Edited to add:
The minute Steven Moffat was announced as the new showrunner, I knew fandom would turn on him. He'd been fandom's golden boy for years, especially after "Blink." And sure enough -- *everything's* wrong with him now! It's hysterical.
Stop. Then think for a second if the arguments being made are valid. Don't just shrug them off.
This, on the other hand,
is issuing an order. Just FYI.
Or make meaningless posts about how these people are "hysterical".
You seem to have a reading comprehension problem. I did not call anyone arguing against Steven Moffat's decisions hysterical. I said "it" -- "it" referring to part in the prior sentence wherein I'd said that "*everything's* wrong with him now" -- was hysterical. In other words, I was characterizing the
situation as being amusing. I was not accusing any person of being hysterical or irrational.
Either provide counterarguments as to why you disagree or don't comment.
Again with the issuing of orders. Weird from someone who just accused someone else of stifling his speech. But whatever.
Listen, I don't agree with every decision Moffat has made. In fact, while I enjoyed "The Impossible Astronaut"/"Day of the Moon," frankly, I thought that both episodes were structured a bit too maturely, a bit too much like how a
grown-up show is structured.
Doctor Who, after all, in Moffat's own words, is and ought to be a children's show, and it felt a little too grown-up for my tastes.
By the same token, I'm also willing to wait and see how Moffat's creative experimentation works out.
Doctor Who would get awfully stale if it followed the same RTD-designed formula for every season, after all.
Meanwhile, I also think that people are reacting disproportionately to the ratings drop. Sorry, but
Doctor Who has been on the air for six years now and just lost a hugely popular lead actor -- you can't reasonably expect it to sustain the same ratings it had at the height of Tennant's tenure. The relevant issue is not, "Is it as popular as it was three years ago?" The relevant question is, "Does it still draw a very large portion of the viewing audience?" Which it does. And since the BBC isn't a for-profit network, it's not like they're just gonna ax any show that has a slight ratings drop. So I'm not too worried about the fact that the ratings aren't as high as they once were.
It's disrespectful to the views of others to just shut down the debate.
No one shut down any debate.