Not recently, but when I was in High School, we were taught that Shakespeare's plays weren't written down until later. They were cobbled together from people who could remember the lines and wrote them down later.
When I went to college I learned a) not even remotely true and b) High School is basically bullshit to keep you busy until you go to college.
As a mod, it's my right to ignore your report as well as reply to the thread to add context.
Today is, largely, considered a monotheistic holiday even though the vast majority celebrating it is blissfully unaware of the polytheistic origins of it.
I didn't call you out on your report, I simply left the comment in situ as it broke no rules, and added context to it.
As a subscriber to Technology, I felt the pain of seeing all the "Elon Musk stops paying rent" or "Tesla stiffs local pie maker" posts, and I was like "OK, it's not tech, and it's not really 'News', where's the 'Business' section?"
The thing is "mods" is not a monolith, not on reddit, and not on lemmy.
I saw a LOT of trash moderation on Reddit, and I've seen some on Lemmy as well. There's good moderation as well.
I think what makes Lemmy different is a) it's smaller so bad behavior is harder to hide. b) there are layers of administration.
If the mods on lemmy are a problem, take it to the Admins of the instance, let them decide. Admins are a problem? Join a new instance and defederate from the problem instance.
Reddit never had a model like that. The Admins were largely absent and really only took action against mods following the black out.