In my model, the bar for excluding an individual, particularly at the beginning is very low.
* We expect people to agree to the social contract.
That's a big exclusion; a lot of people don't care about those
principles.
* We require people to agree to the CoC; that's another big bar.
* At various levels of involvement we work to confirm people are
willing to follow these things to various degrees.
In effect, we have a bunch of exclusions for making the community more welcoming, because over all in aggregate doing that creates a more
inclusive community.
Gerardo> Debian is a community that strives to be open, fair and"Gerardo" == Gerardo Ballabio <gerardo.ballabio@gmail.com> writes:
I agree that Debian has committed to being open and inclusive. However, for me that means something different than you say in your second sentence. To me that means we've committed to being open to as large a cross section of people--as diverse across section of people as possible.
The difference in how we interpret things is whether we're focused onthe individual or the aggregate affect.
Hi,
On Mon, Feb 21, 2022 at 7:28 AM Sam Hartman <hartmans@debian.org> wrote:
In my model, the bar for excluding an individual, particularly at the
beginning is very low.
* We expect people to agree to the social contract.
That's a big exclusion; a lot of people don't care about those
principles.
* We require people to agree to the CoC; that's another big bar.
* At various levels of involvement we work to confirm people are
willing to follow these things to various degrees.
In effect, we have a bunch of exclusions for making the community more
welcoming, because over all in aggregate doing that creates a more
inclusive community.
A community with a low bar for expulsion is not inclusive. It is selective.
Sam Hartman wrote:
I agree that Debian has committed to being open and inclusive. However,for me that means something different than you say in your second
sentence. To me that means we've committed to being open to as large a
cross section of people--as diverse a cross section of people as possible.
The difference in how we interpret things is whether we're focused onthe individual or the aggregate affect.
It seems indeed that we may have a different concept of inclusion. For
me, you aren't really being inclusive if you aren't welcoming all
people, not just those who increase a cross section. And you aren't
really welcoming a group if you aren't welcoming every individual
member of that group.
That doesn't mean that Debian should be forced to keep people who
misbehave (don't respect the CoC) or don't align with its core mission
(don't respect the Social Contract). As I see it, that is a completely different issue.
But this is deviating from the point that I was trying to make, that
is, that Debian can't use the "we are a private group" argument as a
waiver from the (moral, if not legal) obligation to treat people
fairly (and I read your original message as acknowledging the need for
fair treatment, so I thought we were on the same side). So forgive me
if I don't want to go further on this subthread.
Gerardo
For me, inclusion means working with everyone to make Debian as useful an operating system as possible for as many people as possible. I love that Debian is one of the *only* Linux distributions that has a good accessibility wiki, plays the beep toallow me, a blind person, to press s then enter to start the installer with speech. I also love that Mate, pretty much the only really accessible desktop environment out there, is selectable in the installer. I do wish accessibility was more of a
Devin Prater
r.d.t.prater@gmail.com
On Mon, Feb 21, 2022 at 3:12 PM Gerardo Ballabio <gerardo.ballabio@gmail.com> wrote:cross section of people as possible.
Sam Hartman wrote:
I agree that Debian has committed to being open and inclusive. However, for me that means something different than you say in your second sentence. To me that means we've committed to being open to as large a cross section of people--as diverse a
The difference in how we interpret things is whether we're focused onthe individual or the aggregate affect.
It seems indeed that we may have a different concept of inclusion. For
me, you aren't really being inclusive if you aren't welcoming all
people, not just those who increase a cross section. And you aren't
really welcoming a group if you aren't welcoming every individual
member of that group.
That doesn't mean that Debian should be forced to keep people who
misbehave (don't respect the CoC) or don't align with its core mission
(don't respect the Social Contract). As I see it, that is a completely
different issue.
But this is deviating from the point that I was trying to make, that
is, that Debian can't use the "we are a private group" argument as a
waiver from the (moral, if not legal) obligation to treat people
fairly (and I read your original message as acknowledging the need for
fair treatment, so I thought we were on the same side). So forgive me
if I don't want to go further on this subthread.
Gerardo
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