The site's over 21 years old, and has ALWAYS been a mod police state. It organically grew up that way because the original site admin was a control freak rex who badgered the other mods into following suit. One of the former MBTA forum mods used to post here intermittently, and basically said he was hounded night and day by that admin to 'go hard' at everybody with insane stuff like the infamous "say the 'bus' word = bannination" rule. Eventually he just quit as his conscience wouldn't allow him to treat people like that much shit. The current active MBTA mod (the other co-mod has been M.I.A. for almost 5 years) has always been a raging asshole even when he was just a regular poster, so the role and its ensuing power trip fits like a speedo. Current site owner/lead admin is a much more mellow sort than his predecessor, but the culture was ingrained long before he took power so the place still anachronistically runs high on its former supply. There are over 50 named moderators for its maze of subforums (though a lot of them, like the MBTA co-mod, are inactive) and 3 full-time site admins...which is laughable for a site with traffic that's a shell of its former self. aB gets about as many posts per day as RR.net does, and we are WAY narrower in focus. It *sort of* made sense to take that tact in the late-2000's pre- social media when siloed messageboards were still king because there was an incredibly diverse (especially age-wise...teen to senior citizens) audience of career railroaders, urban/transpo planners (like we have here), historical preservationists, rabid train foamers, and curious/casual users constantly competing for attention and frequently clashing. It was legit rough trying to unite so many competing constituencies under one "railroad talk" roof.
That's not the case anymore. You have social media taking the lion's share out of the news bite, sites like Reddit, etc. catering to the micro-cultures, and a generally aging population that still sticks to old-fashioned messageboards. They never recovered from the late-2010's "purge years" where lots of regular posters (myself included!) were mass-banned for absolute-nothing reasons to reinforce the hegemony of the career railroaders (who were allowed to be as badly-behaved as they wanted to be). It particularly gutted the ranks of the NY/NJ/PA-area subforums that were previously the biggest regional traffic drivers (now it's New England), and chased off almost all of the young posters. The ravages of age have simply taken their toll in the years since, as the average age of active posters there is well north of 60 (and in some cases...70 and 80). With death claiming a lot of the cherished historian ranks, and retirements decimating the railroader insider ranks. What you're left with is a sparse and motley collection of remaining insiders...and a top-heavy mix of very active but not particularly insightful posters repeating the same things over and over again. With the "war on quotes" (which is an admin-sourced dictate, although it's the MBTA mod who takes it to stupidest extremes) diluting the focus further and the lingering mod shennanigans (or...like the anarchous Amtrak subforum...self-deadlocking moderation because the on-duty mods all hate each other more than they like culling the constant rabbit holing) being the lingering cultural skeleton defining the place after the skin has worn away. And it has the worst/most imprecise board search function that I have ever seen, so the same old topics constantly get rehashed (despite the dictates that they be religiously filed in the precise correct thread!) from inability to recall what a previous discussion concluded.
There's still very good stuff to be had there...stuff that can't be found anywhere else on the Internet because of the very particular expertise on display. But it's a site I can get fully caught up on once a week now instead of every day because of how much the quantity and quality has atrophied in the last 8-10 years. Jeff paid good money for the site when he bought it about a decade ago, but I honestly can't figure heads or tails what his overall plan for it is. It's in a steep and possibly terminal traffic decline, but he's still rearranging the deck chairs with constant ineffective fiddling when a cultural reboot and fresh blood is badly needed. aB managed to reverse itself quite nicely out of a similar tailspin with its ownership change of 5 years ago ushering in a different and overall less annoying/better-structured culture here. That's one of the reasons why this site has basically stolen all the good discussion away from the RR.net MBTA sub. It would suck if RR.net ever went dark one day because the whole of the transpo Internet is better off with some of the insight shared there, but I don't miss being an active member there for one day because of all the constant bullshit and drama it entailed. Unfortunately too many once-good posters there feel the same way and have stayed away (forcibly or voluntarily) in droves.