There are those here who want to share, and those who want to win or be right. To enjoy the ISF you have to walk around the obstructions.
I've found the "ignore" feature to be helpful in that regard. Not as helpful as I'd like it to be, but it does remove some of the troll noise.
One thing I've noticed about the conservative mindset is just how fragile it is, and how prone to taking offense at anything that challenges its worldview in the slightest. There's also a profound element of the Golden Age Fallacy to it.
In fact, it seems to be particularly prone to lashing out at any perceived change to its delicate worldview. The conservative mindset is one that is locked into a picture of how the world should be, and that world is a very simplistic one, with clear black-and-white morality, easy to understand, and most importantly,
easy to control. Anything that is too different, too out of their personal experience, or threatens to change or complicate their world, and thus make it harder to control, is inherently bad and should be resisted and/or dismissed. Further, anything that challenges that worldview is automatically taken as an attack on them personally, because they have invested so much of their personal self-worth and energy into that worldview. The comments in this thread are pretty solid evidence of that; but more, that's why religions as a rule, especially the major religions, are so heavily conservative and resist any attempt at change or reform.
They can seem to be perfectly agreeable people as long as they're not challenged, because anything that is not brought to their attention, does impinge on their consciousness, can be safely ignored and presumed not to really exist.
Robert Anton Wilson made a pretty good observation when he said that the world seems to be divided into
neophiles and
neophobes; those who love and embrace the new, and those who fear and resist the new. Evolutionarily, both viewpoints have their purpose.
Most people are neophobes, because in evolutionary history novelty was most often linked to danger, so sticking with the familiar was safer. In modern humans, this translates into conservatism, isolationism, xenophobia, and social conformity. They dislike non-conformists and diversity.
A smaller percentage are neophiles. Since a group that is never willing to try something new will stagnate and is in greater risk of dying out due to environmental changes or population pressures, some small number must be willing to seek out novelty and test it. They have a far higher acceptance of diversity and non-conformity, and tend themselves to be non-conformists. Neophiles often have a considerably lower individual survival rate than neophobes, but groups with a larger number of neophiles more readily expands and adapts to changing conditions.
Few humans are pure neophobe or neophile, but tend to lean very strongly in one direction of another. Humans are unique in that they tend to assign value judgements to neophobia and neophilia, with the greater mass of neophobes dismissing, deriding, demonizing, and even attempting to purge their cultures of neophiles. But throughout history, nearly all great advancements in science and technology, art, and culture have come from those who leaned more strongly toward the neophile side.