This one time, at band camp, MJ Ray said: > Stephen Gran <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Bill's apparently under the impression that Debian has either a > > legislative or an executive branch that exists and wields some > > power, and this idea has apparently made him grumpy. It's good for > > all of us that this idea doesn't actually exist. > > In a way, it does, whether or not you agree with it: DPL+most > delegates are the executive
This would certainly be true if the DPL had the power to veto decisions made by developers, or issue fiats, or any other traditional hallmark of power. Since the DPL doesn't have any of those powers, that assertion doesn't make any sense to me. It has been jokingly said that the DPL could be replaced with a mailbot that just replies "That sounds like a good idea. Why don't you try it?" > DDs are the legislative That doesn't make sense, either. The legislature is a subset of the population, elected to act on behalf of the population. DDs are the population. > secretary+some cttes are the authority I'm not sure what the 'authority' maps to in a traditional government, so I'm not sure what this means either. > but that is a view not agreed by all and I've seen it debated on-list > since at least 2002. Another way of viewing debian's governance is a > democracy / guild / do-ocracy split (which I think appears in Biella > Coleman's dissertation). This sort of interpretation seems more reasonable to me. > It seems unhelpful to simply deny those views, as it's usually pretty > clear what is meant. In the other world-view above, Bill Allombert > seems unhappy with the guild deciding things previously done byq the > democracy. Has that got better or worse since Vancouver? Did > Vancouver mark a structural change? Any decision by any 'guild' or 'executive' or whatever you want to call it can be overruled by GR. I take the fact that no GR has passed as a sign that people are not that upset about it. > Anyone feel like answering the point instead of abusing the viewer? Nice touch. Constructing a sentence that simultaneously dismisses the person you disagree with while crying foul that they're being dismissive is a nice rhetorical flourish. I'm sure it was helpful. -- ----------------------------------------------------------------- | ,''`. Stephen Gran | | : :' : [EMAIL PROTECTED] | | `. `' Debian user, admin, and developer | | `- http://www.debian.org | -----------------------------------------------------------------
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