Andrew, look at the subject, then look at what you wrote. If you can’t find enough kindness in the situation and you are angry then it might be better to not write anything at all.
Let me quote Neil Gaiman from his New Year’s Eve blogpost http://journal.neilgaiman.com/2019/12/a-new-years-thought.html?m=1 (read the full version...) [...] And I hope in the year to come you won't burn. And I hope you won't freeze. I hope you and your family will be safe, and walk freely in the world and that the place you live, if you have one, will be there when you get back. I hope that, for all of us, in the year ahead, kindness will prevail and that gentleness and humanity and forgiveness will be there for us if and when we need them. And may your New Year be happy, and may you be happy in it. I hope you make something in the year to come you've always dreamed of making, and didn't know if you could or not. But I bet you can. And I'm sure you will. Ondřej -- Ondřej Surý <ond...@sury.org> > On 1 Jan 2020, at 09:08, Andrew McGlashan > <andrew.mcglas...@affinityvision.com.au> wrote: > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA256 > > > >> On 1/1/20 1:57 am, Aron Xu wrote: >> Some moments I felt quite heart broken to see Debian is at some >> level of risk that the project rarely faced before. We might hold >> different opinions, techinical or perceptional, such diversity is a >> strength of our community and we could to cherish it by being nice >> to our fellow people. > > Diversity? What a joke, sorry. But it is not very diverse or > inclusive when only a small select group of Debian users get to vote > on extremely important issues whilst the most significant majority of > Debian users are left out in the cold and have to live with it. > > A. > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > > iHUEAREIAB0WIQTJAoMHtC6YydLfjUOoFmvLt+/i+wUCXgxTRwAKCRCoFmvLt+/i > +xvPAP9pdk4rPbshiI9ea8M4zwTymIOi9WPd9LoZ8CkFfl//wgEAsFXOFTC9xBfP > 92lkV8+PwEt353+/wU7yiHIpkpLNtis= > =QMMn > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- >