Reminders:
1. The @fsf board is still run by Alexandre Oliva, who has more compassion for Stallman than for his harassment victimspic.twitter.com/S6RmfjvXCC
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3. The board has issued no statement on the departure of its founder and board chair, beyond a 57-word strictly factual account published almost 2 weeks ago.pic.twitter.com/f7GY32lGs5
4. Stallman's actions over 30 years have disqualified him from any leadership position - full stop.https://twitter.com/sarahmei/status/1177647111166291968 …
4a. That includes leadership of the @fsf, as well as leadership of any of the projects that the organization sponsors.
This is consequences 101, people. It's not hard to figure out.
5. Although the @fsf has not issued any statements about the ongoing Stallman scandal they're embroiled in, they _have_ been very active on their blog & social media.
Since Stallman 'resigned,' the @fsf has used their public voice to promote an upcoming conference, solicit nominations for their annual award, & announce new software releases, among several other topics.
It's ALMOST like the @fsf believes this scandal is just going to blow over, that Stallman can continue to de facto run the organization from his perch as leader of their main project, & those of us applying pressure will go away.
Does the @fsf want to actually be effective at fighting for software freedom? This is how they do it:
1. Remove Stallman as head of the GNU project, or cut their ties to it.
2. Replace the entire board.
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