I am not saying any critique should be immune from response. That is the nature of criticism. You are giving an opinion and some people will disagree or not like your opinion and reply. So I think its fair (I still see the WOW thing with 4E but I also have very little emotional investment in that discussion at this stage in my life

.
I would also point out, whether a claim is accurate or not is going to be subject to debate. I think mother may I is an inaccurate description of the play styles it is usually leveled against. At the same time, it didn't fall out of the sky as a term, there is a reason people who don't like those play styles, invoke mother may I. So I would prefer to engage that kind of critique in good faith and make my own case for why it is not accurate (and as I said, I've already done so in other threads so I am not rushing to discuss that here), while respecting 'mother may I' is the other persons' legitimate reaction to the style. I mean I can't force someone to like my style of play anymore than I can force them to agree with me about Rosemary's Baby, or horror films in general.
The only place I take issue here is when people mistake the critique for an objective description. It is obviously a negative term. So if you use it to talk about an approach someone else enjoys, of course they are going to object.
Okay well...the main reason I asked was, you've made that exact comparison yourself. About 4e. A comparison that plenty of people find both highly inaccurate and more than a little pejorative. Something which was said at the time, and which was dismissed: "You are projecting."
I point this out specifically because it's just really frustrating to see this pattern. Certain things are totally kosher for pejorative, subjective criticism, usually things where the speaker (as you say) has "very little emotional investment in that discussion." But then, when a pejorative, inaccurate description comes along for things the speaker
does like, we get spirited defenses of how criticisms should prioritize accuracy and inoffensiveness and fairness to all parties, and that so-called
calling it like it is is actually bad for discussion and harmful to further understanding.
Demanding fairness and respect and accuracy only when
one's own preferences are under the microscope isn't any better for discussion or understanding. It just turns every discussion into a gatekeeping contest, who can successfully characterize the opposition as pejorative.
I have very little investment in the discussion of OSR things, which is why I generally ignore most OSR-related threads, sometimes I don't even bother to open them. (I have found some neat things in them from time to time, though, so I'm not actively
avoiding them either.) What would stop me from telling you, "
You are projecting. Some people just played these games, and felt they were similar to Mother-May-I (personally I didn't think that about OSR). That is a fair reaction. They are basically saying, Y feels too much like X and I don't like Y to feel too much like X."? If your response was valid then, about a game you aren't (and presumably weren't) emotionally invested in discussing, why is it not valid now, about a game
I'm not emotionally invested in discussing?
I just...I want people to not be trying to have it both ways. Either pejoratives are sometimes okay and thus cannot be dismissed out of hand solely because they are pejorative, or pejoratives are never okay and should never have been used to begin with. I've been seeing a breakdown of that standard in this thread, and I am deeply frustrated by it.