At 05:45 PM 2/14/00 -0700, Vernon Schryver wrote:
>In other words and politically correct pretense asside, the IETF is not
>an international organization.  Despite its posturing, the IETF is a U.S.
>or perhaps North American organization that welcomes non-U.S. participants
>and occasionally spends a lot of its U.S. participants' time and money to
>try to make people outside of North America feel welcome.

As a non-US IETF participant, I found this statement mildly insulting.  But 
then I have to ask myself "why?".  It is true that a majority of IETF 
participation is US-based.  It is true that the IETF secretariat is wholly 
US-based.  It is true that the IETF is an outgrowth of a US national 
organization.  So on the face of it, your statement appears entirely true.

But I am still uncomfortable with it.  It implies that, somehow, any non-US 
participant is somehow a second class citizen, who is permitted to attend 
purely as a concession by the US elite whose organization this is.  Maybe 
that also is true -- but I don't have to like it.  I very much prefer the 
"pretense" that the IETF is an organization that provides technical 
direction for a truly global facility, and that it aspires to do so for the 
benefit of all the world's people, with equal status and consideration 
allowed to any who can participate, from wherever they may originate.

#g
--

------------
Graham Klyne
([EMAIL PROTECTED])

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