I'm going to say this once, and only once, because I feel that it is rude. The next time I say it will be said more rudely.
Whether you ascribe everything as Andir's fault or not, and whether or not it is his fault, repeatedly implying, or stating, that every blowup was his fault is not helpful. It takes two people to cause an argument, or at least two conflicting voices.
I do not care what you think, or what is true. This is about rhetorical structure.
In this thread, appealing to the opinions and statements of the thread moderator to increase your ethos and support your argument will get you nowhere. Both of you are being too argumentative and too inflammatory. I say this as someone who has watched most of the thread regulars critique both sides, and seen activity fade as it moves to the side to make way for this caustic argument.
Therefore, no matter who started it, ended it, was most annoying, or held the "correct" position, or held the position I liked the most, or who I like the most, or argued with the most destructive rhetoric, you are both problems right now.
This finger-pointing needs to stop.
I don't care if you disagree with each other's positions or not. Do so politely, give each other second chances, give each other opportunities to be gracefully wrong, and constantly ask yourself if you are correct or not--if your opponent has a point you can learn from. This is not a place to win or prove that you know more. This is not a place in which one's education and vocation gives one the right to trample on others.
I am certain there are "primitive" tribes who could teach me about mathematics. I know this because I have heard about anthropological studies of different conceptions of number, and I was entirely amazed. It was a vision both beautiful and wise.
I'm sure everyone understands this analogy, so let's move on.
This is a place to learn. Bring what you have to the table, but be aware that someone else may tell you you are completely wrong. That person may be right; that person may be wrong.
But you know what?
Each of us only has the absolute power to create one decent person in our lives, and that's us, ourselves. Each of us only has the power to educate one person in our lives, and that is, again, us.
So put the focus on learning rather than fighting. Ask questions rather than making edicts, and work to understand rather than convince. Become the best person you can be.
That is the most progress we can be guaranteed to make, and it is enough.