Turmoil for Drupal
Turmoil for Drupal
Posted May 2, 2017 23:04 UTC (Tue) by sfeam (subscriber, #2841)In reply to: Turmoil for Drupal by mjg59
Parent article: Turmoil for Drupal
"That's the CWG charter. The decision wasn't made by the CWG."
In that case the conflict resolution procedure, linked from the Code of Conduct, was not followed. It directs that unresolved conflicts will be escalated to the CWG.
Posted May 2, 2017 23:18 UTC (Tue)
by mjg59 (subscriber, #23239)
[Link] (13 responses)
Posted May 3, 2017 18:06 UTC (Wed)
by rahvin (guest, #16953)
[Link] (12 responses)
This fringe sexual activity is hated by significant numbers of people and without full disclosure it paints a pictures of bias. Particularly as I've seen no evidence they provided this information to the accused as they should.
Posted May 3, 2017 18:16 UTC (Wed)
by mjg59 (subscriber, #23239)
[Link] (11 responses)
Posted May 5, 2017 0:09 UTC (Fri)
by rahvin (guest, #16953)
[Link] (10 responses)
It's really quite sad because the lack of information leaves two major possibilities, that they reacted to his private sexual life or that the he did something terrible that was not covered by the code of conduct but which should be. People like me are going to believe number 1 but more people are going to believe number 2 (like you) and honestly that's more damaging to his career than just stating what the reason was because it leaves innuendo and imagination to come up with an explanation for what he did. Every HR person from now till eternity is going to fill in behavior X to explain it where X is whatever they want it to be.
Posted May 5, 2017 0:19 UTC (Fri)
by mjg59 (subscriber, #23239)
[Link] (9 responses)
Posted May 6, 2017 0:19 UTC (Sat)
by dlang (guest, #313)
[Link] (7 responses)
I also seriously question if activity that takes place outside the community should be grounds for ejecting someone from the community. Taking that approach leads to big brother type investigations of people you don't like to find an excuse for ejecting them.
If the person is well behaved and contributes usefully within the community, why should it matter what they have done elsewhere?
Our communities are supposed to be based on ability and contributions, now who the person is outside the community.
Posted May 6, 2017 0:26 UTC (Sat)
by mjg59 (subscriber, #23239)
[Link] (6 responses)
Because that argument says that if Hitler turns up to a Jewish community meeting and asks to be let in, you have to tolerate him up until the point where he murders everyone.
Posted May 6, 2017 0:38 UTC (Sat)
by dlang (guest, #313)
[Link] (5 responses)
Especially with an online community, if a person's words within the community are respectful, there's no reason to care what their beliefs, physical appearance, personal hygiene, etc are.
Posted May 6, 2017 1:06 UTC (Sat)
by mjg59 (subscriber, #23239)
[Link] (4 responses)
Posted May 6, 2017 6:40 UTC (Sat)
by dlang (guest, #313)
[Link] (3 responses)
As to your question of a Jewish community refusing to allow Hitler to join. Prior to 1920 or so, they would have no more reason to prevent him from joining than they would have had to refuse any Gentile. By 1945, he had shown his bad behavior to that community directly, so it's not a case of ignoring outside behavior and only taking into account the actions within that community.
Posted May 6, 2017 7:52 UTC (Sat)
by mjg59 (subscriber, #23239)
[Link] (2 responses)
The question that you raised was whether a community should reject someone based on their behaviour outside the community This hypothetical is absolutely related to that question.
> By 1945, he had shown his bad behavior to that community directly,
So it's reasonable to exclude someone who treats, say, women badly from a community that either includes or aspires to include women?
Posted May 7, 2017 16:15 UTC (Sun)
by pizza (subscriber, #46)
[Link]
Meanwhile, we're all still waiting for even a modicum of evidence to back up that claim. Heck, even the "accused" here is publicly asking for said evidence -- or even a specific allegation of bad behaviour.
Posted Jul 15, 2017 17:47 UTC (Sat)
by paulj (subscriber, #341)
[Link]
Transparency is critical here.
Posted Jul 15, 2017 17:45 UTC (Sat)
by paulj (subscriber, #341)
[Link]
Down that path lies excommunicating people from a range of communities that have backwards attitudes to women, or certain minorities, or certain nationals. A number of religious communities particularly. Is that correct?
There are people I've worked with whose political views I find highly regressive, and I'm sure many others would too. Should technical communities exclude people with certain views? I actually feel like I /would/ to sometimes, when those political views are so disgusting, and I have an emotional reaction. Then I think about it more rationally and wonder if that kind of divisiveness would help in the longer run, how objective it could be, where this kind of approach would end up, etc.
Turmoil for Drupal
Turmoil for Drupal
Turmoil for Drupal
Turmoil for Drupal
Turmoil for Drupal
Turmoil for Drupal
Turmoil for Drupal
Turmoil for Drupal
Turmoil for Drupal
Turmoil for Drupal
Turmoil for Drupal
Turmoil for Drupal
Turmoil for Drupal
Turmoil for Drupal
