On 06.01.2016, at 03:58, Kevin Smith <ke...@gohearsay.com> wrote:
> 
>> You state this like some kind of self-evident truth. Understand that not 
>> everybody agrees with you, and scorn is not generally something that wins 
>> people round to your argument.
> 
> If a code of conduct so broad and invasive that it seeks deal with such 
> crimes as the “thoughtless use of pronouns” and “culturally insensitive 
> names” isn’t speech-policing, what is?

Where does it say that though? Did I miss something?


> 
>>> 
>>> The "real and legitimate issues" can be addressed without
>>> one, perhaps with the "conflict resolution" document you referenced. It
>>> is orders of magnitude more reasonable
>> 
>> Ah, some constructive suggestions. More of this please.
> 
> You may not see much of Paul’s engagement in this discussion as constructive, 
> but I would disagree, and it doesn’t look like I’m alone. Many codes of 
> conduct are written by well-intentioned people unskilled in legislation and 
> enforced by tribunals unskilled in investigation and adjudication. Pair that 
> up with the sort of person who earnestly believes they are making the world a 
> better place by controlling what others say and how they say it, who deems 
> any opinion they don’t like “dangerous" and any pushback they receive 
> “harassment"—those sorts of people do exist, and they readily abuse 
> extrajudicial systems—and you’ve got the recipe for gross injustice levied 
> against people with an unpopular opinion. This does not require knowingly bad 
> actors. Everyone involved would be not just cleared but congratulated by 
> their own consciouses for doing what is Right and Good.

"The road to hell is paved with good intentions"...


> Knowing Paul to some degree, I doubt he’s merely using “fascism” as a 
> general, inflammatory descriptor. Make no mistake, a project is not the same 
> thing as a political nation-state. Still, the Contributor Covenant that was 
> put forward as the original CoC does have some fascistic tendencies, 
> including the fact that it reaches outside the scope of the project and into 
> the way a person speaks or behaves on their own time, and it uses the project 
> maintainer’s own understanding of the project’s ethical values as a basis for 
> determining bad behavior. Everything in the project, nothing outside the 
> project…

I know Paul too, and while I really like him as a person and find his company 
most enjoyable (with or without drinks and good steak!) I usually disagree with 
his political views because I think they're overly simplistic or maybe even 
naive, and I think his generous utilization of the word "fascism" during this 
discussion is not helping because it escalate(d/s) the rhetoric at a way too 
early point in time and cause(d/s) division when unity was/is needed.

However, I very much appreciate how persistently and passionately he is 
participating in this debate, especially because I share many of his concerns.

David


--
PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php

Reply via email to