I am unstickying this because a discussion of one moderator's moderation style is not to be construed as a change in board-wide moderation.
This is a letter of intent. Further explanation for this decision can be found here and here. Please note that this decision has not come about as a result of consensus moderator discussion: I am acting on my own initiative following the frankly shameful display of behavior that permeated several threads throughout General Discussion in the past and recently.
So what, exactly, is the purpose of this thread? Is it to say that you intend to be moderating more strictly? If so, that's within your discretion as a moderator and is not a change to the rules. Is it to explicitly change the rules to favor your interpretation of them (as you seem to state in the first bullet)? If so, that is a significant overstep of your bounds as a moderator.
1. The letter of the forum guidelines for good behavior are hereby ignored. The reasoning for this is present in the two posts I have linked.
So, you're going to ignore the very forum guidelines that we as a forum established by consensus? You are saying that, as a moderator, you are no longer willing to be bound by the moderation rules? That is prima facie justification for revoking your moderatorship, right there.
And the two posts you linked don't contain anything to support your case. I understand that you're frustrated by HLP drama. I understand that several people are failing to follow the guidelines:
Being respectful means that you debate the arguments, and you don't attack the person making them; you contribute meaningfully to discussion, and do not disrupt it for others.
What I don't understand is why you are stating your intention to toss out the letter of the guidelines, which supports the very point you are concerned about.
2. In their stead, I will be moderating within the spirit of the guidelines for good behavior. Too many incidents in General Discussion go without action because they are just within the letter of the guidelines.
As I already mentioned, the guidelines already allow for moderator discretion. Do you think so poorly of those constraints that you now want to throw out the rules and moderate based on how you feel about them?
Nobody is above the law. Not the forum members and certainly not the forum moderators.
3. Obvious attempts to bait or incense other members will be met with warnings.
4. Because I am not an administrator, temporary bans will be accomplished by issuing warnings that impedes users posting. Warnings decay automatically over time, meaning I won't be able to forget to re-enable a user's privileges.
These I have no problem with.
5. I am not acting on behalf of the moderation staff, I am acting independently. If, for whatever reason, the consensus of the moderation or administration staff is that I've overstepped my bounds, so be it. I will abide by that declaration.
You have overstepped your bounds. You don't get to take a policy that's been established by consensus and announce that you are going to ignore it and henceforth act on your own authority.
In my opinion, you've gotten so close to the problem that you're allowing your frustration to cloud your judgement. Haven't we established a convention -- if not a precedent -- that moderators which are heavily involved in a discussion should recuse themselves from moderating them? That they should step back, and in the interests of fairness, ask an uninvolved moderator to give their unbiased opinion?
EDIT: Incidentally, if you think there's a deficiency in the letter of the guidelines, then there is a solution that ought to be obvious: propose a change to the letter of the guidelines.