I appreciate the conciliatory tone. I've done my best to articulate my vision for a harm reduction forum and its fundamental differences from a source forum. The differences are very clear if you read my writings on the topic over the years. It is a very principled approach.I think @Excel.exe is pointing out the fact that the line between source board and harm reduction is quite blurred. I think @Millard is telling the truth that the intent is harm reduction. Now let’s speak plainly then. Is Millard 100% accurate or forthcoming that this is truly harm reduction and members have full control over sources and they are just a necessary vendor, no. It’s a business, he isn’t independently rich and this is a just cause and hobby he’s decided to dedicate his life to, he has business and harm reduction is his intent but he also wants to run a successful business. He needs sources and they will always be here, he hopes members help thin the heard so ones that remain are better and reduce harm and help profits. As members we need sources too unless we are all just going to use the forum to learn how to home brew ourselves and yet then we still need raw sources and distributors. There’s no way around it.
Is Millard all benevolent and altruistic, no. Can we expect him to be, no. He’s running a business that we try to take part in and enjoy and try to make better. Perhaps he and we can be more open and honest about it but we will never have this utopia board so let’s work together to make this one as good as we can.
I recognize that in actual practice, many people are actively seeking to turn this forum into a source forum as I've described. The goal for many is to ban sources rather than promote the objective of holding sources accountable in a harm reduction forum. If holding sources accountable results in the sources' departure so be it. However, the endpoint should always be accountability. This is how success should be judged on a harm reduction forum.
There have been some unforeseen challenges where customers join sources to defend them against members trying to hold the sources accountable. This pits members against other members rather than being united to scrutiny source product/practices. This doesn't resemble harm reduction in the slightest.
At the same time, this presents an incredible opportunity for education, to reach out to those members where they are at, and inform them of the risks involved with the products/services they are using. Some will listen. Some will resist. But harm reduction advocates should keep trying.
I recognize this is a lot to ask and I'm sad to see many members give up on the forum. Continually warning consumers and holding sources accountable becomes exhausting when the people you are trying to help regularly reject your message and the sources show little inclination to changing. It is nice to have some measure of success and I understand that seeing a source get banned provides that.
I always hoped people would work with me to improve the harm reduction forum model. There is a lot of polarization and tribalism in modern day discourse. And I shouldn't be surprised that online steroid discussion forums are any different.
I am encouraged as some expressed interest in work for the betterment of MESO and I hope many more will in the future.

