mjburgess
a year ago
The elephant in the room here is the ideological capture of the PSF via its CoC working group. It seems, at best, the power of an unaccountable body to arbitrarily enforce membership conditions (and the like), has not been properly thought through (though, of course, attempts were made). The absence of due process and accountability to the community means the members of this group have arbitrary power to shape the PSF+community however they wish.
They have thus far, explicitly equivocated community criticism of the PSF with "attacking" it; equivocated mentioning the difficulties some communities face with defending these difficulties; and equivocated mentioning the identities of victims of this enforcement with the converse bigotry that people of other identities ought be harmed.
Thus at this point there is no open question about whether the CoC group is enforcing the CoC or using abusing their juridical power to humiliate, defame and exclude members of the community which are critical of the PSF.
This is so repulsive to any reasonable person, the behaviour here is so public and so clearly abusive. Left to their own devices, a PSF operating under this capture will alienate significant numbers of the invested members of the python community -- who are aware-of, and concerned-by, such actions.
I think those of us merely observing this, with some stake in python as a language and community, ought make our repulsion clear. Since this is having, and will have, a serious deleterious impact on those most inclined to participate and invest time in projects of this kind.
MaKey
a year ago
Suspending Tim Peters for 3 months on bogus claims of misbehavior was harmful for the whole Python community. He's the guy who wrote the Zen of Python. If nothing is changed I fear that the Python community will continue to suffer.
This is also another data point that confirms my dislike of Code of Conducts. At first glance they seem like a good idea, but in practice they are often used as a tool to oust people disliked by the ones with the power to enfore them. Afterwards they are used as shield from criticism.
mjburgess
a year ago
The issue isn't Tim, and I'd imagine that was his intention. The issue is what Tim's reasonable criticism (of PSF policy changes) provoked, ie., a list of accusations from the CoC group that were obscenely defamatory (grounds for a civil suit) and nakedly self-serving. A list of accusations with no references, no quotes, no examples to evidence them -- just a list of the most extreme kind of bigotry that no reasonable person would tolerate.
Tim, and others, I'd say have given pitch-perfect good faith criticisms of the PSF carefully given with unfalting good-faith to perform the truth of these criticisms. Namely, he induced a group bullies in the middle of defining their own power to abuse others, to bully and abuse him. It is in these actions that we see, immediately, that his criticisms are accurate.
The PSF may presently believe they can conduct themselves this way, and the powergrab will eventually be permitted and so on -- but they've severely underestimated the relevant power dynamic: which is not between the PSF and powerless former critics, but between the community and the PSF itself.
at_a_remove
a year ago
What I cannot seem to find is a comprehensive list of similar events, Code of Conduct takeovers. Otherwise, concerns can be dismissed with "Well, that was a one-off situation," whereas a long history of such things would be more convincing to those in the middle.
Perhaps one could even honeypot the code to find out if the CoC types might be looking at you next. Include terms like blacklist and master and whatever else triggers them, see if you get some requests to change them, and there you go.
ensignavenger
a year ago
The Drupal Associations maltreatment of Larry Garfield seems to rhyme with the maltreatment of Tim Peters.
mjburgess
a year ago
I kind think we've arrived in this moment to be honest. I think it's fairly mainstream (in discursive environments) that the most recent moral panic has been hijacked by mostly WASPish elites to capture positions of power in across communities seen to have some cultural influence (hence, esp., tech).
What I imagine is also now clear is: how little these people really understand about the politics they profess (eg., in this case, saying emjois are some sort of communicative violence); how little they care about the communities they've tried to hijack; and how mistaken they are about the nature of the power that exists within them.
A bit like a dog chasing a car that finally bites it, I doubt any of them are very happy. Consider how many WASPish elite journalist types have flooded into various media journalism and criticism, and how repulsed their own audiences are at them, and likewise. It's pretty obvious that many critics in these areas despise their audiences, and the enviroments they are in.
One imagines a similar wave of realisation is hitting these groups who've tried to take over technical organisations. In the end, these are incredibly meritocratic communities whose advancement is just "someone does something". You can't really argue with volunteers of this sort, you might as well argue with the sea. If you defame them, humiliate them, marginalise them, the people left won't be the ones who do any work. You cannot browbeat people into volunteering, only out of it.
This is the asymmetry at work that these obnoxious power-chasing elites are starting to realise: their obnoxiousness and abusiveness can only alienate, it cannot include. And so, no one watches their movies, tv programs, plays their games, reads their articles, or.. volunteers for their open source projects.
But we have to be very clear here: this has nothing to do with injustice. The people who are active fighting to reduce sexism, working in domestic violence shelters; fighting racism, working with police to reduce community violence; and so on -- these people are not out there on twitter posting slurs against perceived enemies.
This group had found out that you could use this issues to defame people online, worm your way into positions of power, and somehow gain some status and credibility. Now they are discovering how self-destructive and pointless such a strategy has been .
woodruffw
a year ago
I've seen a lot of groups unfairly tarred, but I'll be honest: you've thrown me with "Python is being ruined by WASPs."
mjburgess
a year ago
It's not exclusively WASPs, but these do form the basic core of this elite capture project. Ivy leaguers don't wear tweed and calfskins anymore, they're in doc martens protesting at someone's oppressive use of an emoji.
woodruffw
a year ago
What exactly do you think WASP is short for? By almost every metric, the period of political and cultural ascendancy for American WASPs ended at least a generation ago. Consider the backgrounds of our last 3 presidents, as well as our next one (regardless of who it is).
(What’s so bewildering about this is that your framing suggests that it wasn’t the WASPs who were in tweed before, but some other demographic from whom the WASPs wrested the elite status. But the exact opposite is - rightfully - the case.)
mjburgess
a year ago
I'm not sure why you think I'm talking about presidents.
Go and have a look at who the sorts of people I'm talking about are, you'll find a lot of rich white people dressing-down. Who do you think their parents are?
> your framing suggests that it wasn’t the WASPs who
I don't see where I said this.
WASPs have fallen from the presidency to bitching in newspapers, sure; and in random social organisations. That's my point. Their children are now bleeding-heart vipers going around, as their parents did, inserting themselves in positions of power as best they are able: "Representing" the interests of other groups who've they've almost no experience or understanding of.
If you havent noticed yet, have a look. When you see this kind of intra-elite warefare taking place, go look at the pictures of who's involved. Have a look at their bios. It's often a lot of upper-middle class white children playing games.
Go walk into one of the top universities in the world.
woodruffw
a year ago
> I'm not sure why you think I'm talking about presidents.
Because you’re also talking about universities and social organizations as if Python broadly resembles either :-)
The point was that, in relative terms, WASPs today have less political and cultural capital than they’ve ever had at any previous point before in the US’s history. Which is a good thing.
(This is why I wanted you to spell out what you think WASP stands for. It isn’t “rich and annoying white person with social capital,” despite the fact that many WASPs are that.)
amy-petrik-214
a year ago
Father Ted opined on the concept quite extensively. It's hard to say whether the python "leaders" responsible for this are sociopaths or well-intentioned. If well intentioned the concept is to mold the community into an image of what is good and pure and right, to clip out impurities. Totally from the line of road to hell paved with good intentions. We see how this type of thinking goes - Pol Pot, Germany in the 1940s, and so on - the lesson is that it is wrong to try to mold a person or a society so forcefully, no matter how sweet the ideal. Secondly along the lines of Father Ted, it's increased likelihood at higher levels of seniorities that these are simply sociopaths who use the veil of "good" and kudgel of white guilt to leverage as much power as possible for themselves. Knocking out a scapegoat or two helps establish their power to grant or deny the future of absolutely anyone, basically a low key reign of terror. Sad to see any organization go that way but especially sad in an organization thinking itself to be for the common good.
mirashii
a year ago
There are a lot of strong assertions here, but no references for those who aren't already following along. Care to share any?
qklcv
a year ago
It is hard to follow along, because any time someone does mention the elephant in the room the entire submission gets flagged and sinks rapidly.
linsomniac
a year ago
yowzadave
a year ago
I don't like to nitpick word choices on HN comments, but since you used the word three times in this one: I believe you meant "equated" (to imply that two ideas are equal), and not "equivocated" (to show uncertainty, or to waffle).
mjburgess
a year ago
I'm using equivocation in the fallacy sense: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equivocation
In most of my uses, the popular sense also applies, "the use of ambiguous language to conceal the truth or to avoid committing oneself; prevarication."
If you read the briefs put out by the WG against Tim and others, they are engaged in equivocation which has the effect of equating, say, mentioning the difficulties experienced in a sexist work organisations with advocacy of sexism (the converse position).
linsomniac
a year ago
I was surprised that there was no mention of the latest drama in "the kinds of things the board talks about" section. I would have assumed it was something that was a topic at the board retreat. But, maybe Simon was deliberately trying to avoid mentioning specifics to today and make this a more general post?
I would like to see an independent investigation into the recent events of the CoC WG, because it really appears to be indefensible.
mjburgess
a year ago
If I were Tim, or any others who've been bullied-out, I'd sue for defamation. Members of the WG have issued briefs, on behalf of the PSF, which list the supposed infractions that read as the worst sort of libellous yellow journalism.
Eg., To equivocate discussing the past difficulties faced by victims of sexual harassment in corps with defending sexual harassment is sickening.
Perhaps this group of people have grown up in twitter space where the game is obnoxiously strawmanning and rephrasing another person in order to farm outrage against them (eg., "oh so when you mentioned sexism, that means you're a sexist!"). However this conduct is now on behalf of an organisation formed in law, with legal duties and responsibilities, and now has liability for this conduct that is practically absent on twitter.
This is a very serious problem for the PSF. You cannot have a working group releasing a dozen accusations of the worst kinds of bigotry, entirely false and unevidenced (etc.), on your behalf. Punishing your members, and the like. The legal liability here is incredible.
linsomniac
a year ago
That's an interesting idea, but for a variety of reasons I'm fairly sure that Tim won't do that. Particularly not without a legal defense fund or some pro bono legal services secured to back it, but also because his vibe on it largely is "I've been called worse by better".
edit: Probably also hard to do since the CoC WG post with all the allegations on it were against an unnamed developer, making it at least an uphill battle.
mjburgess
a year ago
Defamation doesnt require you to name the person, only for it to be obvious to a relevant reader who it is. The fact we're all talking about Tim kinda resolves that problem on the face of it.
Whether he sues or not is less important than the PSF needing to realise what crazy liability they face for their WG posting defamation this extreme against a person.
zahlman
a year ago
>Probably also hard to do since the CoC WG post with all the allegations on it were against an unnamed developer,
That didn't stop them in my case (https://discuss.python.org/t/im-leaving-too/58408/10; contrast https://zahlman.github.io/dpo_archive/).
mikrotikker
a year ago
Same thing happened to the Linux kernel via the same kind of self appointed CoC group. It's absolutely disgusting.
RMPR
a year ago
What situation are you referring to?