On Wednesday, March 15, 2023 12:10:01 PM MST Roberto C. Sánchez wrote:
> BTW, I think that in this particular instance it did "directly impact
> the operation of Debian itself" because pandemic-related restrictions
> (e.g., vaccines, travel distruptions, etc.) became something that
> impacted Debian events and operations.

I do see your point, but my personal feeling is that isn’t a strong enough 
nexus for it to be 
something that is discussed in Debian itself.  Debian is going to be full of 
many people from 
many countries under many different governments with many different laws and 
feelings 
about those laws.   If we allowed debate of any topic that affected Debian at 
the level of 
vaccines or travel disruptions it would completely disrupt the work that Debian 
is trying to 
accomplish.

The key to this subject is how significant the nexus is between the subject and 
Debian’s 
work.  In my opinion, it must be much stronger than in the case of any 
controversial 
discussion of COVID (again, irrespective of my personal beliefs about the 
factual content of 
that discussion).  In my previous email I used the example of discussion of 
copyright or 
patent laws, which can become controversial in some quarters, being something 
where the 
nexus is strong enough that it is appropriate to discuss them in Debian.  
Unless it rises to  /
that/ level, I don’t believe this is the right place for it to happen.

Soren

-- 
Soren Stoutner
so...@stoutner.com

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