Well, I can't make the claim that I understood the analogy, so my apologies for not grasping the connection.
I have no interest in commenting on decisions about release dates, since that is very much in others' areas of expertise. The question of the value of social equality, though, is in my expertise, so I'll bite. There are demonstrated "goods" that occur more, or more frequently, in societies with lower degrees of internal inequality, *regardless* of absolute degree of wealth. That is, there are demonstrable benefits that members of societies gain by increased equality, even if that equality is the result of a policy that reduces the potential attainment of some sector of the society. Crime rates are an obvious, and well-documented, example; theorized, but poorly researched, is the possibility that industrial productivity is a similar characteristic. There. Now it's *really* off-topic :) ap ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Andrew J Perrin - http://www.unc.edu/~aperrin Assistant Professor of Sociology, U of North Carolina, Chapel Hill [EMAIL PROTECTED] * andrew_perrin (at) unc.edu On Mon, 3 Jun 2002, David Wright wrote: > > > s/not\s+//; > > I appreciate the good-natured jibe. I didn't think the analogy to the > Debian release process was so far-fetched, but it appears that it is. > > I never understood people who claim that to relase Woody for mainstream > architectures (essentially i386 and PPC) before releasing it for > non-mainstream architectures would make the non-mainstream architectures > "second class citizens." > > I was hoping someone who takes this position would either explain why my > ananlogy fails or explain why we really should spend on all 11 diseases > equally, even though this does not help the most people that we can. > > I really would like to understand those people better, because right now > they seem as silly to me as the people who want rich kids attend public > schools to ensure that their money doesn't buy then a better education > than the poor kids get. (Equality by holding everyone back.) > > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]