Do we need a code of conduct like this, or so we need a more general dispute 
resolution process? Something that is public and aimed at mediating disputes 
(even ones about bad conduct) and removing repeat offenders.  To be honest, 
larger issues of harassment should be handled by the police.

A code of conduct is basically "be excellent to each other", but what that 
means is never going to be well codified in a document anyone can produce. It's 
why we have a judiciary in the "real world".

I don't participate too much here, but I've never see a group implement a code 
of conduct go well. I'm a fairly socially liberal person, but have been told in 
one group that my views as a cis, hetero, white, middle class make aren't 
welcome in discussions about getting more women or minorities to participate. 
Specifically there was a discussion in that group about how since women often 
bare the burden of child care, even when both partners work, that side projects 
as a hiring criteria are sexist. I mentioned that as an involved father I also 
find little time to work on side projects and that the issue is more about 
those with kids than specifically women and was essentially run out of the 
group.

Another time, same group, someone was discussing guns, and someone else said 
that this kind of discussion is why women don't participate much. I mentioned 
that I know more women who own guns, hunt, and target shoot than I do men who 
do that. I was again told to shut up and banded for a few days when I pressed 
as to why a not-male-centric discussion was being censored in the name of 
sexism and fairness.

How will this CoC handle these situation? I obviously offended people and had 
no intention of doing so. I was also told that the moderators/CoC commitee 
would act fairly, and I obviously believe I was mistreated by them. Forgive me 
for not believing in the benevolence of the governors.

Jim

On June 5, 2018 11:49:06 AM EDT, Benjamin Scherrey <scher...@proteus-tech.com> 
wrote:
>On Tue, Jun 5, 2018 at 10:37 PM, Peter Geoghegan <p...@bowt.ie> wrote:
>
>> It is of course possible that a member of the committee could act in
>> bad faith for any number of reasons. You can say the same thing about
>> any position of leadership or authority within the community, though.
>> That hasn't really been much of a problem in my experience, and I see
>> no reason for particular concern about it here.
>>
>
>I thought the same thing as a member of the Django community. It
>adopted a
>CoC that I vocally warned was dangerous and far more likely to be
>abused
>than provide any benefit. I was shocked when the very first time it was
>ever invoked it was by one of the founders of the project (whom I
>previously personally respected) and it was absolutely used in the
>manner
>that I had feared which was to shut someone up whose opinion he did not
>like rather than any legitimate concern. Unfortunately this is not such
>an
>unusual circumstance as one might hope in these projects or
>conferences. It
>is impossible to separate the concept of political correctness from
>these
>CoCs I find and they are much more dangerous things than they appear.
>We
>should tread with extreme cautious about adopting such a thing.
>
>  -- Ben Scherrey

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