Civility in the Marketplace of Ideas [was: Public Domain Python]
Pat McCann
thisis at bboogguusss.org
Thu Sep 21 17:36:53 EDT 2000
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Thu Sep 21 17:36:53 EDT 2000
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cbbrowne at news.hex.net (Christopher Browne) writes: > RMS doesn't always say particularly agreeable things; he's pretty > honest when he _doesn't agree_. > ... > But "uncivil" does not seem to be a civil comment. I guess the key word above is "pretty". Please read the following post for clear evidence of uncivility. If you cannot find it there, I probably won't be able to convince you of it, but I have no doubt that most people who read it carefully will understand it as a call for an action justified by a claim of an expected good end result to be brought about by the deception. It's uncivil in my book. http://www.progressive-comp.com/Lists/?l=berlin-design&m=93118897023514&w=2 > I rather think that many of > those that consider him uncivil have more than a little bit of a chip > on their shoulders themselves. Quite right. It's similar to the chips put on their shoulders by Bill Gates or Bill Clinton. It's a form of jealousy in which people get emotionally upset when other people have great success by engaging in unfair (and uncivil) tactics while other people who've not used those tactics and may be pushing a better "product" are not nearly so successful. It's similar to the chip RMS has had on his shoulder for twenty years. It's not always a bad thing if it has a beneficial influence on other people's ideas. (But I'll admit there are better ways to do so than than responding to chip flippers on Internet forums.)
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