> It would be like asking children, "Should we offer you some candy > before your meal?"
This, I'm afraid, I don't agree with. What is so appealing about non-free software? To most users, any additional software packages are appealing. The free packages are appealing, and the non-free packages are appealing too. So my analogy with candy was not exactly right; the right analogy would be, "Would you like some MORE of this candy?" If the GNU Project offers the public a version of Debian set up in this way, most users would choose to look through the non-free packages--so, in effect, we would be recommending them to the users. That would put us in a conflict with our principles. Of course, your principles may be different. But I am not asking you to stop following your principles, only asking for the GNU Project to have a way to follow its principles. The problem is that we, Debian, *have* to ask that question, somehow, somewhere. No, that is not exactly true. What is true is that many of the people in Debian want to offer a system which does provide non-free packages, and will probably insist Debian give them a way to do that. You've restated the situation in a way that simplifies it, but that simplification obscures some of the alternatives--including, perhaps, the best available compromise. We provide a great free OS that can run non-free software. We *have* to advertise that fact in order to draw people in and get them to see the advantages of free OSes. I disagree with that position, and also the claimed symmetry between the FSF and Debian. But there's no need to argue about this; it isn't relevant to the question at hand. No one is proposing that Debian stop talking about non-free packages, or stop distributing non-free packages. That's not what the issue is. The proposal being voted on is to *separate* the distribution of the non-free and free packages. This way, people who want to refer to both can refer to both--and the GNU Project, which wants to refer to only the free packages, can refer to only the free packages. Right now, when people ask the GNU Project "Where should I get a GNU/Linux system to install", there is simply no place we can send them in accord with our principles. So right now, we don't send them anywhere in particular. I would like us to be able to send them to the Official Debian system, on an official Debian site, and feel 100% good about it.