> Sent: Saturday, April 17, 2021 at 9:41 PM
> From: "Frosku" <fro...@frosku.com>
> To: "Giacomo Tesio" <giac...@tesio.it>, "Andrew Pinski" <pins...@gmail.com>, 
> "Andrew Pinski via Gcc" <gcc@gcc.gnu.org>
> Subject: Re: removing toxic emailers
>
> On Sat Apr 17, 2021 at 10:08 AM BST, Giacomo Tesio wrote:
> > But in fact, millions of people outside the US would feel excluded.
> > And threatened. But we are all "jerks", right?
> >
> > ...
> >
> > Such culture is also dominated by RICH men, but it's unable to see the
> > problem in term of global and local distribution of wealth and power
> > and thus interprets it as a matter of sex, gender and race.
> >
> > Which is obviously totally fine for rich men, as it distract people's
> > attention from the root of their power and won't really fix the problem.
>
> Did you ever notice that income group (in a global sense) is never a
> protected characteristic in these COCs which proclaim to defend the
> disenfranchised and the disadvantaged? It would seem to me that low income
> is the greatest predictor of disadvantage globally.

The one thing that would make a difference is if the rich take on the idea
of sharing.  The reason that communism failed was because the idea of sharing
was taken on by the poor, who had nothing to offer.

If there is going to be progress regarding the way the free software movement
sees things, mocking day and night those who have things to offer is stupid.
I have no intention of going there, or trying to buy a ticket to heaven with
my goodness.

> >>= %frosku = { os => 'gnu+linux', editor => 'emacs', coffee => 1 } =<<
>

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