Trying "to get some nice young girls" is not a fact. It cannot be proved right or wrong. It is a behavior that raises ethical issues. The perspectives on those issues have certainly changed along centuries. Anyway, that is no reason to accept anything. Especially if our community intend to be welcoming.

https://trisquel.info/en/wiki/trisquel-community-guidelines asks for respect among community members:

Discrimination -- Do not discriminate against people based on age, gender, sex, sexual orientation, disability, religion, ideology, ideas, social class, nationality, race, intelligence, or any analogous grounds. Profanity -- Do not curse or use hard language here. Social norms differ from place to place; hard language can deter people from our community. Incivility -- Do not insult others here. Disagree and challenge ideas instead.


vPro/chaoesqueteam/maybe im a lamp repeatedly infringes all those guidelines. Collectively hiding his messages through the minus button is making our community friendlier. Especially to newcomers. In the present case: especially to women.

Trying to prove vPro/chaoesqueteam/maybe im a lamp wrong is no solution. See https://trisquel.info/forum/3g-modems-coming-integrated-next-gen-intel-atom-real-time for instance. Replying to him is just giving him more opportunities to repeat that men have a divine right to marry female children (< 13 years old), that women are the enemy of men, that they are conspiring against men, that they should always obey men, that they should never be accepted in a free software programming team, that the husband should have a right to rape his wife, that feminists should be killed, that Hans Reiser was right to kill his wife, etc.

vPro/chaoesqueteam/maybe im a lamp has been repeating this speech for at least 10 years: http://geekfeminism.org/2009/10/08/psa-mikeeusas-hate-speech-and-harassment/

Because "the old testament says so". It is not an argument and there is no argument against that.


And according to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spherical_Earth :
The concept of a spherical Earth dates back to ancient Greek philosophy from around the 6th century BC, but remained a matter of philosophical speculation until the 3rd century BC, when Hellenistic astronomy established the spherical shape of the earth as a physical given. The paradigm was gradually adopted throughout the Old World during Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages.

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