On Mon, Jul 26, 2010 at 9:43 PM, David Gerard <dger...@gmail.com> wrote: > On 26 July 2010 20:40, Milos Rancic <mill...@gmail.com> wrote: >> If photos of Tienanmen protests are >> forbidden in China, we should remove them for population from China. > > I certainly hope you're saying this as an attempt at reductio ad absurdum.
No, but I haven't given the context. Here is the quote from my email to Robert Harris: "My position toward this issue has ideological background. Thus, I don't pretend that it is the universal truth :) I am not contributing to Wikimedia projects to enlighten anyone. I don't want to force anyone to do something. If the will of the majority of population is not to see documentation about birth control, then it is not my problem. And, usually, it *is* the view of majority of population wherever this problem exists. I am willing to help to the minority and I completely support activists who are doing that. But, Wikimedia projects are not activist projects in the narrow sense. They are about gathering knowledge and giving it to the rest of the world. And if majority view of some population is not to see some part or all Wikimedia projects, I am fine with it. And to give an example from my country: I am living in a deeply corrupted country. OK, it is not likely that someone will go to the jail because someone else accused that person falsely. But, it is very hard to do anything in Serbia if a person is not well connected and if they don't want to be corrupted. (The main reason of keeping Wikimedia Serbia at low profile is, actually, this one. We don't want to be corrupted and we are passing harder way.) But, it is not a matter of Wikimedia Foundation to do anti-corruption activism in Serbia. It is a matter of inhabitants of Serbia. Doing information activism is sometimes stronger than doing legal activism. Ignoring majority opinion in Texas [if it makes a law which forbids educational material about sexuality] and showing to them educational materials in sexuality is the same kind activism as marking the roots of corruption in Serbia. While I am fully for that, I don't think that it is a Wikimedia job. But, as I said before, it is my ideological opinion and I am not saying that it is a universal truth." _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l