[Short answer]
As an individual user, I don't need Tor on Mac OS 10.6, but as a developer of a 
soon to be released Tor-dependent project I would like to see support continue.

[Long answer]
We are developing a system called HideMeta that relies on Tor and other proven 
security components to encrypt and anonymize communications.  We are packaging 
the system as interpreted source code so there is no need to trust binary 
executables.  Anyone can inspect the code they are actually running to verify 
it does what we claim.  Therefore, we rely on Tor support for the operating 
systems on which we run.

If the Tor project abandons OS X 10.6 (which a significant number of users are 
stuck with due to lack 64-bit processors or the need for features like 
Rosetta), we will either have to advise against using Hidemeta or installing an 
outdated Tor.  In the face of pervasive, network-wide eavesdropping, our system 
gains strength with the number of active users.  Our view is that even on an 
insecure OS, HideMeta users are still increasing their personal privacy, making 
pervasive surveillance less effective, and increasing the security of whistle 
blowers, journalists, dissidents, and others who legitimately need strong 
privacy and, hopefully, use hardened operating systems.  For us, supporting a 
widely used OS like 10.6 is a good thing, even if it has been deprecated.

I'll also note that we do not need the Tor Browser.  Availability of a 
standalone Tor executable for OS X would be better for us. 
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