He's entirely opaque about why, though. We've never known who the moderators are who oppose any of the sensible reforms that have wide-scale majority support, such as PDMA, or improvements in the mod selection process.
To our view, these decisions happen in total secrecy, without context or explanation, and the lack of transparency is extremely frustrating to those of us who seek reform when such an opinion as "That will never work" is basically pulled from what seems to be thin air.
The fact that some "reforms" such as a server merge are given attention to while other reforms such as a PDMA compromise are put off the table is also pretty much an ad hoc thing based on the power and will of the moderators. And you might not be trying to sell us a yes, but BSmith and EQ certainly are. Just read the thread.
Which is another issue, long ignored; the mods claim to act with one voice on matters of policy, but rather like the upper officials of Communist China, you are in reality organized into various opinionated factions behind a veil of secrecy, the members of which are only speculated at, except when specific information on your disagreements is directly told or leaks out to us. Not that we have the privilege of openly discussing your disagreements, as PDMA makes very clear.
In order for something to be a negotiation, you're correct that both sides require leverage of some sort. What you have to ask yourself is what might happen when frustration with the moderator culture at CFC rises to a certain level, and whether or not that will be a greater impediment to the proper functioning of the site going forward.
If you don't see the slow decline of a forum based on creative talent because of this medieval leadership system, perhaps you simply need to reconsider how it could be better. It becomes necessary for me and others to broaden the discussion beyond a server merge, because it seems highly unlikely that the moderators will ever embrace a culture of democracy and accountability without sustained outside pressure to do so.
The historical record for the behaviors of privileged groups and their willingness to surrender power is far too informative in that regard.
