On Fri, Nov 22, 2002 at 12:06:01PM -0600, Manoj Srivastava wrote: > I think this is not really a matter of screwing up, this is a > matter of, in some cases, avoiding the tyranny of the majority;
...a platitude directly rebutted by the paper to which John Robinson linked. > My contention is that there are a number of documents that > define what the project is; and that we agreed to follow when we > signed on to the project, and any changes to these documents, which > cut to the heart of not just the developers, but the whole free > software community (the DFSG is known as the gating criteria for free > software far beyond the extents of the project), ought to be signed > on by _most_ of the developers. Yes. Anything more than half is "most", by definition. > So, supermajorities are, in my opinion, still needed for cases > where we want a (very) rough consensus, where mere majority ought not > be the sole criteria for adopting a measure. consensus n : agreement of the majority in sentiment or belief [syn: {general agreement}] Hear, hear. I agree that we should have a rough consensus before changing such documents. We just don't need a supermajority to have it. (Technically, I suppose, we'll always have a supermajority except in cases where the winning option does so by only one vote.) -- G. Branden Robinson | Optimists believe we live in the Debian GNU/Linux | best of all possible worlds. [EMAIL PROTECTED] | Pessimists are afraid the optimists http://people.debian.org/~branden/ | are right.
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