On Jul 03, Raul Miller wrote: > Eh? So we're voting on an issue that's not even going to be on the > ballot?
No. But this issue (A) does represent a change in our policy toward non-free software, which moves us closer to position B (purging references to non-free and contrib). So, do we want to move toward B, or do we not want to move toward B? Philosophically consistent positions that are possible: Support A, Support B (RMS) Support A, Oppose B (presumably what happens if 1 wins) Oppose A, Oppose B (current position of project) A and B have a common underlying issue. We can argue that A is a less extreme position than B, but both positions are in the same direction from current practice. On a continuum of support-opposition to non-free software... not to scale of course. <Support Oppose> +-------+---[--+-------+--------+---+] | | | A B | Caldera RHS Debian RMS (now) [..] represents the range of positions Debian could conceivably take. Note we can't move very far to the left (nor should we), since we don't distribute commercial software ourselves and therefore can't reasonably license it. About the only thing we could do is eliminate the non-free/contrib/main distinction, which I think would be a mistake. On the ballot at hand: I have no problem with ballot position 2; it appears to satisfy RMS's needs and does not compromise our social contract (nor does it change our position on that continuum above in any real sense). It is extra work for someone, however, so I will not rank it first. Chris -- ============================================================================= | Chris Lawrence | Get your Debian 2.1 CD-ROMs | | <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | http://www.lordsutch.com/ | | | | | Grad Student, Pol. Sci. | Visit the Amiga Web Directory | | University of Mississippi | http://www.cucug.org/amiga.html | =============================================================================