Hi, people. I'm not a DD here, so let that colour your opinions of what I will say however it will.
I am, however, deeply interested in Debian and have done wee bits of coding for it in the past, and keep meaning to do so more for it. It is an unfortunate situation that often people when they're told, "hey, would you please be polite?" they respond with "NO, BECAUSE THAT INFRINGES UPON MY HUMAN RIGHT TO BE AN ASSHOLE!" Of course I'm caricaturising the response, but I believe that as far as caricatures go, it's relatively accurate. I also don't think it's necessary to elaborate on why the caricaturised response is unacceptable. Some people just don't get what "politeness" means. I would define it as behaviour that is acceptable in front of your grandma, but I suppose not even that is clear. I vote in favour of a code of conduct in order to codify for those who don't get it what "politeness" means. Copying Ubuntu's code of conduct would be most beneficial. The threat of losing DDs, especially members that supposedly we've worked hard to make feel welcome (hello, d-women!) would be most unfortunate. In order to rectify the damage that has been done by some members of our community, a code of conduct would prove the commitment that Debian has to fostering a good environment of collaboration and freedom. Should anyone feel oppressed by a code of conduct and their "freedom" to be an asshole be impinged, I remind that person that anti-asshole laws are in place to protect the freedom of *others*, not just your own. C'mon, people. Let's all get along here. And be excellent to each other. - Jordi G. H. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org