Can't wait to see how many of the people who're concerned about SJW-inspired codes of conduct being adopted by open source projects have something to say about a major open source project adopting a specifically religious code of conduct that excludes non-believershttps://twitter.com/DarrenPMeyer/status/1054364170232258562 …
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Replying to @hikikomorphism
An old school Catholic code certainly makes a change from all the Puritan ones going around.
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Replying to @topynate
extremely predictable take, but I don't recall any other CoC's including anything nearly as explicit as "First of all, love the Lord God with your whole heart, your whole soul, and your whole strength."
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Replying to @hikikomorphism
You mean "explicitly religious" I take it. Many of the codes I'm familiar with certainly don't shy away from the arcane minutiae of their associated belief system.
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Replying to @topynate
mind pointing out some explicit examples? Usually the behavior punished by said codes is pretty solidly in "don't be an asshole" territory.
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Replying to @hikikomorphism
It's hard to bridge the gap between what's "obvious" to Benedict and what's obvious in the 21C, but the below is pretty insiderish. N.b. I'm not pointing to something "punished" -- your quote is also not actionable, per "we make no enforcement of the more introspective aspects".pic.twitter.com/FXqr0Gh6dz
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Replying to @topynate
This is a list of things that such projects _won't_ punish and thus literally the opposite of what I requested
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Replying to @hikikomorphism @topynate
The dangerous implicit is that you can be informally punished for making social faux-pas. That's why it specifically says they won't punish people who harshly correct you. Also you explicitly can't criticize back, which used to be the defense mechanism against Linus-style rants.
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Replying to @lordcataplanga @topynate
This is the standard talking point, but in every case I've seen it's been a sustained refusal to, eg, use someone's preferred pronouns and not a single slip-up
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Replying to @hikikomorphism @topynate
Likewise, I'm sure the SQLite folks won't burn you at a stake for being a filthy atheist. It all comes down to trust. I know lots of Catholics in real life so I know which parts of their code are for real and which are 'piety signalling', so to speak. But I know few SJWs.
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I'm more or less the opposite, but there are definitely valid concerns on both sides
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