Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Posted Sep 17, 2019 7:55 UTC (Tue) by cevin666 (guest, #960)In reply to: Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF by colo
Parent article: Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
I mean get real: RMS has done many great things for which he deserves thanks and credit but that does not make him a saint. Or even a nice person. And when you are a public figure like he is than you better watch what you say because to some people its gospel. With great power comes great responsibility.
Posted Sep 17, 2019 8:06 UTC (Tue)
by tchernobog (guest, #73595)
[Link] (1 responses)
I also share several of his overall political views.
However, he is the spokeperson of a non-profit organization, and a public figure. You cannot represent the FSF as president and behave like he did now and in the past. Else you are hurting the movement. And there is no excuse for that. You know people will use you as a straw man to discount everything done by the FSF If you don't step down.
So I applaud the choice of resigning.
Posted Sep 17, 2019 8:23 UTC (Tue)
by rschroev (subscriber, #4164)
[Link]
Can you elaborate a bit on what you mean exactly with "behave like he did now and in the past"? Not knowing the details of RMS' life or the details of this story, I don't know what you're referring to. From what I have read (https://old.reddit.com/r/KotakuInAction/comments/d5axzu/w...), which may or may not misrepresent the facts, I got the impression he has done nothing wrong whatsoever.
Posted Sep 17, 2019 8:12 UTC (Tue)
by Pinaraf (subscriber, #33153)
[Link] (35 responses)
Where did he say anything like that? The most "offensive" comment I found was saying that no matter the age, a rape is a rape. This is not an excuse for child abuse, as many people want to understand it.
Posted Sep 17, 2019 8:30 UTC (Tue)
by azumanga (subscriber, #90158)
[Link] (34 responses)
Posted Sep 17, 2019 8:45 UTC (Tue)
by evad (subscriber, #60553)
[Link] (31 responses)
Posted Sep 17, 2019 8:58 UTC (Tue)
by krig (guest, #92101)
[Link] (7 responses)
It has absolutely nothing to do with freedom of expression.
Posted Sep 17, 2019 12:13 UTC (Tue)
by evad (subscriber, #60553)
[Link] (6 responses)
His opinions are not a problem for you as a supporter of the FSF, its only a problem if you disagree and you're a supporter of him personally. Otherwise you'll soon find you cannot support basically any organisation because there will always be people in an organisation who and express beliefs you disagree with.
You're essentially arguing for a society where anybody in any leadership role must hide their opinions and must renounce their right to freedom of expression, and that is not a society you'd want to live in, and certainly not one I want to live in.
Posted Sep 17, 2019 16:03 UTC (Tue)
by krig (guest, #92101)
[Link]
I don't understand how this is difficult.
Posted Sep 18, 2019 12:01 UTC (Wed)
by niner (subscriber, #26151)
[Link]
Posted Sep 19, 2019 7:15 UTC (Thu)
by gfernandes (subscriber, #119910)
[Link] (2 responses)
Your position is a bit like saying: most married people cheat, so what's the big deal about the POTUS cheating?
Maybe that's why it isn't fine for the President of the FSF to be expressing personal opinions that are unsound?
Posted Sep 22, 2019 10:46 UTC (Sun)
by mfuzzey (subscriber, #57966)
[Link] (1 responses)
I mean it's not a nice thing to do sure but it was a problem between him and his wife and not illegal so I don't see why it became a public problem.
Though I think part of it too was lying to a court when asked about it and that I *can* understand being a problem.
But Americans seem to have strange views on this type of thing to most Europeans.
Posted Sep 22, 2019 15:02 UTC (Sun)
by madscientist (subscriber, #16861)
[Link]
It became a public problem because the Republican-appointed special counsel investigator made it a witch-hunt when they couldn't prove the original crimes the special investigation was set up to look into (related to real estate deals etc.) They discovered the affair and decided they could box him into lying about it, and succeeded. There was nothing illegal about what he did, only in the fact that he lied about it.
As with everything in American politics it seems, the cover-up is what does you in not the act itself and no one ever seems to learn the lesson. Clinton's vaunted political instincts definitely failed him here: his ego was big enough to believe he could get away with it. He should have admitted the affair, said it was a private matter, then turned around and discredited the special counsel by saying he was just trying to dig up personal dirt on the president rather than finding real crimes. Even with Republicans sending out the report just before the elections, they ended up losing five seats on the House of Representatives so clearly the public was not on board.
Posted Sep 20, 2019 16:15 UTC (Fri)
by Dissident (guest, #134517)
[Link]
I'm afraid we /already/ live in such a society. As evidenced by countless examples that could be cited, exactly what you have described has increasingly been the reality for some time now. (The case of Brendan Eich is the most salient one I am aware of in the FLOSS world.) And it's not limited-to those in /leadership/ roles either. Any employee who expresses a view or makes a remark that runs afoul of the ever-narrowing, ever more totalitarian confines of the prevailing PC/"Woke" orthodoxy can expect to lose his job. Business-owners and the self-employed are not immune either but subject to threats such as denial of essential services by the dominant tech and finance monopolies.
Posted Sep 17, 2019 9:03 UTC (Tue)
by DrMcCoy (subscriber, #86699)
[Link] (5 responses)
(Also, legal depends on the jurisdiction. Take holocaust denial, for a crass example. Not legal in many European countries, legal in the US, but should still be unacceptable everywhere.)
Posted Sep 17, 2019 12:25 UTC (Tue)
by evad (subscriber, #60553)
[Link] (3 responses)
What does that mean in practice? If its legal, and thus the mechanisms of courts and police are not relevant, what does it matter if you or I believe them acceptable or not?
I'm trying to understand what you're saying or perhaps proposing? Do you mean its not acceptable to you, and thus, its your opinion that his opinions are not acceptable, or something else?
Posted Sep 17, 2019 12:37 UTC (Tue)
by DrMcCoy (subscriber, #86699)
[Link] (2 responses)
Take, again, the holocaust denial example. Assume there's a person that denies the holocaust happens (or even says that it should have happen) in a country were it is legal to say this out loud. Would you then shrug and let this person be a elementary school teacher, because after all, it's legal so it's fine?
Posted Sep 17, 2019 13:21 UTC (Tue)
by evad (subscriber, #60553)
[Link] (1 responses)
To answer your question; I would hope that schools and educational facilities have appropriate remedies to ensure that teachers are teaching facts, as best we can define them. This is a very different scenario though. In this case he has opinions on an entirely different subject to his role (or rather, what was his role).
Posted Sep 18, 2019 16:47 UTC (Wed)
by Wol (subscriber, #4433)
[Link]
Campaigning without bothering to think through the LOGICAL CONSEQUENCES of your own beliefs? That is pretty much the definition of the word "prejudice", and it leaves the world very much the poorer.
We're heading back into a world of thought police and "the tyranny of the majority" where it is a crime to dissent against the prejudices of those in power (whomever those may be). A complete travesty of "freedom of speech" - which was intended to protect the dissidents from those in power!
Cheers,
Posted Sep 18, 2019 16:43 UTC (Wed)
by Wol (subscriber, #4433)
[Link]
The difference between holocaust denial and the age of consent is that the holocaust is a historical fact. The evidence says it happened (I've known and met Auschwitz survivors. I was lucky that, to the best of my knowledge, none of my family ended up there - it was a close run thing).
The age of consent is a social thing. What is acceptable to one society in one age is not acceptable to another society or another age. Interactions in the law cause weirdos like a British honeymoon couple in the US could be arrested for child sex. And even just in one country (Britain), the mere change of date could cause what *was* perfectly legal (an under-age couple) into a crime because one of them turned 16.
PLEASE use some logic. You may not like the consequences, but don't let YOUR prejudices condemn someone else because their prejudices are DIFFERENT. That way lies witch-hunts and lynchings, and YOU could be the victim ...
Cheers,
Posted Sep 17, 2019 9:12 UTC (Tue)
by cevin666 (guest, #960)
[Link] (6 responses)
Posted Sep 17, 2019 12:10 UTC (Tue)
by evad (subscriber, #60553)
[Link] (5 responses)
I agree, but I also didn't say that. I said we should not castigate (punish) him.
We can contradict him, and we can call him horrible, but we should not *punish*.
Posted Sep 17, 2019 15:39 UTC (Tue)
by jzb (editor, #7867)
[Link] (3 responses)
If Stallman had said "you know, I've decided proprietary software is OK sometimes" a lot of the people defending him for his current statements would be calling for his dismissal. It's ridiculous for people to defend him for saying things far, far, far worse that actually pose real harm to people who should instead be protected by society.
Posted Sep 17, 2019 20:05 UTC (Tue)
by mfuzzey (subscriber, #57966)
[Link]
Yes but that would be in direct contradiction with the aims of the FSF.
But I don't think that most people should be forced to leave an organisation for any opinions they may hold that have nothing to do with the domain of activity of that organisation.
It's a bit different for politicians because they, by definition, handle everything.
If there is *legal* case to be made then he should be prosecuted, otherwise left alone.
That's not to say I agree with his previous opinions on pedophilia. I certainly don't, but I don't think it has anything to do with FSF.
Removing people for unpopular opinions that have nothing to do with their function sets a very dangerous precedent .
Posted Sep 18, 2019 16:55 UTC (Wed)
by Wol (subscriber, #4433)
[Link] (1 responses)
Are they harmed by the fact that they CONSENTED.
Or are they harmed by the fact that society said they should not be allowed to consent.
Or are they harmed by the fact that they realised, POST FACTO, that society disapproved of their actions.
Personally, I think the third one is far more harmful than the first. BUT I DON'T KNOW. And more importantly, you don't know either! As is so common, you are taking speculation as fact, probably confusing cause with effect, and as the saying goes, "for every complex problem, there is a solution which is both simple and WRONG".
As I said elsewhere, where do you draw the line? The only SAFE place is to outlaw sex completely ... :-)
Cheers,
Posted Sep 19, 2019 7:28 UTC (Thu)
by gfernandes (subscriber, #119910)
[Link]
If you don't agree with the line, you are free to raise logical objections.
However, if you raise unfounded, or unsupportable objections, you should not be surprised at general backlash, particularly if you happen to be a public figure.
Stallman publicly expressed opinions of dubious psychological value, on deeply sensitive social issues. Stallman was President of the FSF.
Hardly surprising then, that there was this backlash.
Posted Sep 20, 2019 20:08 UTC (Fri)
by rahvin (guest, #16953)
[Link]
Posted Sep 17, 2019 10:49 UTC (Tue)
by camhusmj38 (subscriber, #99234)
[Link] (7 responses)
Posted Sep 17, 2019 12:15 UTC (Tue)
by evad (subscriber, #60553)
[Link] (6 responses)
The opinion that 'vaccines cause Autism' is not dangerous. Claiming there is proof, and evidence, that vaccines cause autism, or seeking to persaude others not to vaccinate children, *that* is what is dangerous.
The mere opinion, by itself, is not itself dangerous.
Posted Sep 17, 2019 14:18 UTC (Tue)
by edomaur (subscriber, #14520)
[Link] (4 responses)
A dangerous opinion is a danger by itself. Claiming that vaccines cause Autism is dangerous, because it is a lie that cause harm.
Posted Sep 18, 2019 16:58 UTC (Wed)
by Wol (subscriber, #4433)
[Link] (3 responses)
As someone with personal experience, I would actually say that the opinion "vaccines are safe" is extremely dangerous. (And no, I'm not anti-vaccine. Vaccines ARE dangerous. But the alternative is worse.)
Cheers,
Posted Sep 19, 2019 13:46 UTC (Thu)
by nix (subscriber, #2304)
[Link] (2 responses)
Posted Sep 19, 2019 15:34 UTC (Thu)
by Wol (subscriber, #4433)
[Link] (1 responses)
A few days later the parents noticed something more serious. This lad is now nearly 30, and without medication he would need to drink some 20 or 30 litres of water a day to avoid dying of dehydration.
The medical opinion was that "vaccines are safe. This can't have been the vaccine". Circumstantial evidence says "it has to be the vaccine - he had a reaction and was taken ill about that time".
And there are PLENTY of cases (my list is pretty old, I would expect there are plenty of newer ones) where severe adverse reactions have been swept under the carpet - the girl who walked in for a rubella vaccination, was wheeled out in a wheelchair and never walked again - "it can't have been the vaccine's fault!"
Such reactions ARE rare. Without vaccines life would be far worse. But assuming that vaccines are safe causes real harm to real people, and believing the issue away makes that harm much worse than it need be.
Cheers,
Posted Sep 20, 2019 12:19 UTC (Fri)
by anselm (subscriber, #2796)
[Link]
Vaccines are the single most successful public-health intervention in history. Millions of people per year would succumb to debilitating and often fatal diseases like smallpox, polio, measles, diphtheria, … if it wasn't for vaccines.
Vaccines aren't “safe” in the sense that it is 100% guaranteed that getting vaccinated won't ever cause anyone any problems. But nobody is seriously making that claim – and insisting on perfect 100% safety for vaccines is as foolish as insisting on perfect 100% safety for anything. Certainly for the commonly-administered childhood vaccines the risk/benefit evaluation is overwhelmingly in favour of vaccination.
Posted Sep 17, 2019 15:07 UTC (Tue)
by martinfick (subscriber, #4455)
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Posted Sep 17, 2019 15:27 UTC (Tue)
by jzb (editor, #7867)
[Link] (1 responses)
And part of that means, if you say something that a lot of people find abhorrent, they're going to express the opinion that they will not support institutions that employ them as a spokesperson.
"I also don't think its wise to charaterise personal opinions published on a personal website as 'harmful'."
Supporters and detractors for Stallman seem to agree on this much, at least: He's influential, and people take his opinions on topics seriously - not just about free software, but on many things.
As such, Stallman's "personal" site is not just read by his immediate circle of friends, but any number of people who want to know more about how he sees the world, etc.
Stallman's comments about underage sex are being distributed to a lot of people, some of whom are going to be influenced by his opinions. Whether they be about free software or politics or the appropriateness of having sex with people who are considered too young to consent.
So - if you find the idea of it being OK to have sex with underage people "harmful" (I do) then it's absolutely harmful for him to be using any platform to spread this idea. It is also creepy, and does not reflect well on any institution he represents.
He, and his supporters, seem to happily accept the positives of his being able to speak on things inside and outside the realm of free software and be taken seriously. You cannot have the one without expecting that if he decides to opine on age of consent and so forth that it will be considered "personal" and out of bounds to consider in the light of his roles with MIT and the FSF.
If, instead of finding these views repugnant, people were in agreement with him I doubt anybody would be rushing to say "oh, no, don't read Richard's private blog. Those thoughts are personal. You shouldn't be paying attention to *that*."
"As soon as we start to categorise some opinions as harmful we start down a road where we can decide which opinions are acceptable, which are not, and catstigate accordingly."
We already live in that world. And we should. Some opinions _are_ harmful, full stop. It's ridiculous in 2019 we're debating whether or not an underage person "presented" as "willing" in the contexts of Epstein's victims. It is time to stop defending this kind of thing. There is no room for debate or discussion - it's wrong.
Posted Sep 20, 2019 16:16 UTC (Fri)
by Dissident (guest, #134517)
[Link]
From whence do you assume the authority to make such pronouncements? Who determines what opinions are "harmful" and which have "room for debate or discussion"?
What is to stop /someone else/ from defining the limits of acceptable debate or discussion in a way that would exclude one or more of /your views/?
You may be smug in the knowledge that none of your views run afoul of the current ever-narrowing, ever more totalitarian PC/"Woke" orthodoxy but what if that were to change? What if you suddenly found yourself deemed a /crimethinker/ by the powers-that-be?
(For examples of how rapidly the Overton window can shift, one need look no further than any number of recent past but since-reversed positions and statements by public figures as prominent, mainstream and widely-respected as Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. Or have a look at the Paul Krugman column, written in 2006 linked-below:
Posted Sep 20, 2019 6:24 UTC (Fri)
by Dissident (guest, #134517)
[Link] (1 responses)
I note that neither RMS's above-quoted comment nor any other statement of his that I am aware of support the claim that he "finds child abuse excusable". From any honest reading of RMS's words it would be quite clear that his very point was to question the prevailing assumption and assertion that sexual contact between an adult and a minor is, a priori, inherently and invariably child abuse. As wrong, objectionable, abhorrent or reprehensible one may find RMS's thinking to be, to characterize it is as "find[ing] child abuse excusable" is, at best, tendentious. - A close reading of RMS's words (quoted above) show that rather than making any conclusive statements on the matter-in-question, he was quite clearly merely expressing skepticism about and questioning the conventional, prevailing narrative. In addition to RMS beginning his comment with the explicit words, "I am skeptical of the claim", note his use in his second sentence of the qualifying term seem. Finally, even if one maintains that the 2006 comment of RMS that I have quoted in-full and addressed in this post, or any of his other comments or (almost entirely alleged) behaviors or actions prior to his most recent comments constitute legitimate grounds for his removal from his position as head of the FSF, the question remains: Why now? Has the FSF, at any point prior to the present one, publicly disavowed any of the past statements of RMS that are now being cited as justification for his removal?
Posted Sep 21, 2019 17:10 UTC (Sat)
by Wol (subscriber, #4433)
[Link]
Again, the words "voluntary" and "abuse" aren't defined, but according to any reasonable dictionary I find them mutually exclusive - if it's voluntary it can't be abuse, and if it's abuse it can't be voluntary.
No person in their right mind volunteers to be abused. If they do (or appear to do) so then either they have been coerced or brainwashed - which isn't voluntary - or they aren't in their right mind and need protecting.
Minsky is a case in point - the girl in question may well have appeared to Minsky to be "up for it", but she had been coerced into it. And no, I don't agree with the posters who said Minsky should have seen a bunch of red flags - maybe they were there and that's why he declined, but given that geeks are notorious for not spotting that sort of thing there are plenty of blokes who would have fallen for it.
Note that it was a common tactic of the KGB and Stasi to do exactly this sort of thing to foreign diplomats - I've even heard of cases where the agents married their targets! (Is that tabloid reporting, or actually true I wonder...)
Cheers,
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
>You're essentially arguing for a society where anybody in any leadership role must hide their opinions and must renounce their right to freedom of expression, and that is not a society you'd want to live in, and certainly not one I want to live in.
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Wol
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Wol
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
I'm really sorry, if I harm his reputation by that but he harms actual lives by saying stuff like that especially as he is a cultural hero to many of us.
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Obviously if someone's opinions in the field of action of some organisation go against the aims of said organisation there is a problem.
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Wol
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
"I think vaccines cause Autism." is dangerous and has lead to people dying.
Also, you are entitled to your opinions but if you express them that doesn't mean you won't experience consequences only that the govt won't punish you.
The FSF is free to say that it doesn't want to associate with someone who expresses such opinions.
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Wol
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Wp;
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
>Some opinions _are_ harmful, full stop. It's ridiculous in 2019 we're debating whether or not an underage person "presented" as "willing" in the contexts of Epstein's victims. It is time to stop defending this kind of thing. There is no room for debate or discussion - it's wrong.
https://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/27/opinion/north-of-the-b... )
Employing obvious sarcasm, "cevin666" wrote,
Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Yeah, its a sad day when somebody who finds child abuse excusable faces a shitstorm for saying so.
Challenging that tendentious and quite possibly even libelous characterization of Richard M. Stallman [RMS], "Pinaraf" asked,
Where did he [RMS] say anything like that?
"azumanga" then replied, quoting the first sentence of the now-infamous two-sentence comment that RMS posted to his personal blog in 2006:
I am skeptical of the claim that voluntarily [sic] pedophilia harms children. The arguments that it causes harm seem to be based on cases which aren't voluntary, which are then stretched by parents who are horrified by the idea that their little baby is maturing.
Consider, as well:
- RMS defined neither child nor pedophilia in the specific context that he used either term in his statement. Properly defined, the term pedophilia is limited-to cases involving an attraction specifically to prepubescent children. As widely-used, however, the term often includes even fully sexually mature adolescents who have not reached whatever the established age-of-consent happens to be in whatever the case or context in-question is. While there may be near-universal consensus (as well as clearly and objectively delineated boundaries) concerning the former (i.e., true pedophilia), the same cannot be said for the latter (as evidenced by the often considerable regional variation in age-of-consent laws).Richard Stallman resigns from the FSF
Wol