The thing is there were many readers of FPH (150k subscribers and probably way more readers as people were afraid to subscribe/comment as it could get you automatically banned from other subreddits) so naturally they participated in different subreddits as well.
I remember there was no (at least for a short time I was reading it) calls for brigading and linking to other parts of reddit was prohibited.
For example, I think that health minister shouldn't be fat and fat health minister calling for cigarette ban is comedy in the making and mockery of the position.
With views like that I am likely to read r/fatlogic or r/FPH from time to time and even subscribe to them. I will make comments expressing my views in other subreddits as well and as such views are rare enough it's natural to link me with above mentioned communities or say that I am "coming from them to comment".
The problem is if it's then treated as brigadding. It isn't, there are just many people with politically incorrect views and they tend to gravitate to subreddits where they can express them without being automatically downvoted to death as is the case in popular subreddits. Once such subreddit becomes popular (and FPH was one of the most active subreddit on the whole site during the week it was banned) eveything can be labelled brigadding.
I don't know why you're vociferously defending FPH against the charge of brigading.
A sub being mentioned (but not linked) in FPH would result in massive traffic spikes. Smaller subs with a couple of hundred subscribers and a couple of thousand visits per week would suddenly get thousands of visits per hour. The increased traffic is fine, but some of those people would comment.
You've mentioned the huge numbers of subs to FPH. Even if it's only a small proportion of those people causing problems it's still a lot of people.
And you use, yet again, trivial examples that no-one (certainly not Reddit) cares about. No-one cares if you call some minister fat and stupid. What they do care about is getting people fired from their jobs; having child protection social workers called; huge amounts of brigading; hate mail to real life addresses.
I remember there was no (at least for a short time I was reading it) calls for brigading and linking to other parts of reddit was prohibited.
For example, I think that health minister shouldn't be fat and fat health minister calling for cigarette ban is comedy in the making and mockery of the position.
With views like that I am likely to read r/fatlogic or r/FPH from time to time and even subscribe to them. I will make comments expressing my views in other subreddits as well and as such views are rare enough it's natural to link me with above mentioned communities or say that I am "coming from them to comment".
The problem is if it's then treated as brigadding. It isn't, there are just many people with politically incorrect views and they tend to gravitate to subreddits where they can express them without being automatically downvoted to death as is the case in popular subreddits. Once such subreddit becomes popular (and FPH was one of the most active subreddit on the whole site during the week it was banned) eveything can be labelled brigadding.