Michael and South Paw, when you were moderators, did you ever delete a message? Maybe some spam or a cheesecake photo or a thread that was uncivil?
If so, did you leave us a permanent marker or notation on the message boards that is still visible to all visitors to say, "There was spam here but we took it away"? If so, please point it out to me. If not, why didn't you? I think you generally didn't. Sometimes you moved deleted items to a private place called Deleted Post Forum, which is where they probably reside to this day, unless there has been a board cleaning that removed them. In other cases, they were sent off into cyberspace with the "remove" button, rather than preserved for analysis by moderators and others who are privy to such things. Some items were destroyed even after creation of Deleted Post Forum, and not by me.
When I remove a repeated quote, WE DO NOT LOSE ANY NEW MATERIAL. We lose a duplicate. The text of the previous message is somewhere above the edited message in the same thread.
Should my finger slip or my eyesight fail me, and as a result I also cut off some new material by mistake, is there anyone who would know what used to be there? Yes. The person who posted can edit to restore, or can make a whole new message. I will add a request to my form letter asking the person who posted to review to make sure that no vital organs got cut off during the editing operation.
If you owned a business and you had some file folders in which you kept invoices and letters, and you found that you had three copies of the same invoice or the same letter in the same folder, wouldn't you be inclined to throw away two of them and keep just one? Or, would you prefer to have a bunch of duplicate stuff to trip over every time you looked into that folder? Me, I prefer to save just the one invoice. Does your secretary leave chits of paper in the folder saying, "Today I threw away two duplicate copies of invoice 08-01285"?
If recording this activity is a concern, I recorded the dates of the edits and the names of the people whose messages got the quotes chopped off. Ordinary visitors don't have access to those records, but they exist. And, the message bears a permanent notation that an edit occurred. It fails to say what the edit was. So, your first concern is whether something nefarious is going on, whether text has been altered. Again, the answer is that no new text was altered.
In editing messages of approximately 50 people to delete previously stated material, I have heard back from only two or three of them to ask why. The other approximately 48 people whose messages got edited apparently didn't care enough about it to make an issue of it, and about a half dozen other posters said in subsequent e-mails to me, "Okay, thanks." So, I really don't think we're going to be able to make a federal case out of this.
Michael, you say, "They [moderators] should be seen[,] not heard. That means helping the board run smoothly but not so obtrusive that they show up like a sore thumb." Now we are really getting to the heard of your complaint. It is that you think that I am "over-moderating". You are arguing a double standard to the extent that on one hand you don't like seeing me on the forums very often, but on the other hand you're saying, "Tell us more about what you're taking off the forums and be accountable." Now I am confused whether you want more of me or less of me. ("All of me, why not take all of me? Can't you see I'm no good without you...." Insert emoticon of Billie Holiday here.)
I return to my question: "If I edit my own message and you can't tell what I did to it to change it, as an ordinary visitor do you have a right to know what I changed?" Why?