Hi, > but even so, remain respectful. Disagreement is no excuse for poor > behaviour or personal attacks, and a community in which people feel > threatened is not a healthy community.
What does "poor behaviour" mean? What does "person attacks" mean? Regarding this: > Note that many of our Contributors are not native english speakers or > may have different cultural backgrounds; see also our [diversity > statement](http://www.debian.org/intro/diversity) it is already questionable do refer to things like the above statements. Combined with: > Serious or persistent offenders will temporarily or permanently banned > from communicating through Debian's systems. Complaints should be made it means that the exegesis of what the above agglomeration of glyphs in the Roman alphabet means is in the hands of those with the loudest and powerful voices in Debian, which does not necessarily mean that the intepretation agrees with other's opinion. Why don't we try to be *honest*, something like Debian is a practical oligarchy. If you don't happen to sit in key positions, you should be careful what you are saying since disrespectful behaviour versus the oligarchs will be punished by bans without recurse. Like in every jurisdiction, Debian is not about true or false, good or bad, but what is declared as right or wrong by the law makers. Following the Code of Conduct I will probably be punished for making jokes about the different gender, different religion, different political opinion, and maybe even different OS. Where is the border, where is the limit. The whole point of what I wrote is that Good behaviour *cannot* be defined. Period. That is the reason we have a juridical system. Laws decide on breaking or following the law, but not on good or bad (behaviour). But laws try to be clear in *what* is defined. All this code of conduct tries to look like a law but contains only wishee-washee unclear statements that leaves only wide open play ground for power plays. The only standardization of "good behaviour" found in wide spread use are religious based (8 folded path, 10 commandments, ...). Do we want to go this way, becoming a religion? A short "Gedankenexperiment": What if someone in the upper ranks of Debian (committee, delegates, secretaries, etc) decides to pervert Debian and starts being *very* active, positively, acquiring a lot of followers, and at the same time a lot of powers by combining some of the jobs or distributing them between friends. Then, (s)he uses this to silence those opposing further steps on grounds of bad behaviour. The educated around here might be reminded of a certain unahppy figure in the 30ies and 40ies in Germany. ************* Non-legal style documents that allow for punishment are dangerous. ************* I don't know whether the code of conduct suffices for that, but as with other things, it is a slippery slope, once started, more and more behaviour patterns are categorized and classified. I am against this as long as there is nobody who can give me an evaluable criteria to judge good and bad behaviour. Norbert ------------------------------------------------------------------------ PREINING, Norbert http://www.preining.info JAIST, Japan TeX Live & Debian Developer DSA: 0x09C5B094 fp: 14DF 2E6C 0307 BE6D AD76 A9C0 D2BF 4AA3 09C5 B094 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-project-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20131126140714.gf5...@gamma.logic.tuwien.ac.at