I still recommend not cross-posting to misc for discussions of this sort.

Looks like it's hard to appreciate the humour in different 
languages/cultures that one is not native to.  I am sure that the 
references are intended to be humourous, and do not come across to so 
intensely to many english speakers.

But sure, just lead the way in being more genteel.  Maybe it will catch 
on.

Austin

On Sat, 10 Nov 2018, [email protected] wrote:

> I do not have the same opinion as you when it comes to the Project 
> itself, but I just wanted to share about the ?subculture? stuff.
> 
> I also think it is really disappointing, for example I am always talking 
> to japanese people about OpenBSD;  and I don?t have anything to say when 
> such remarks come.
> 
> Why are you using drug names? Do you want to make a better IT or are you 
> just having some weird fun together (and making an OS as a mere side 
> effect)? Those are some of the things people like us wonder about 
> sometimes. Especially people from civilizations where drugs alcohol etc 
> are not seen as mere hobbies. And where words have meanings that are 
> thought throughout and not used carelessly.
> 
> This stuff won?t stop me from using OpenBSD for my core projects.
> 
> But some really need to open their eyes. Is such pride really useful and 
> beneficial?
> 
> Sorry if the Project has absolutely no control over this kind of stuff 
> (I?m sure it does...)
> 
> James KAWASHIMA
> 
> 2018/11/10 11:04?justina colmena <[email protected]>????:
> 
> >> On November 8, 2018 7:48:02 PM UTC, Juan Francisco Cantero Hurtado 
> >> <[email protected]> wrote:
> >>> On Thu, Nov 08, 2018 at 03:52:06PM +0800, Alex wrote:
> >>> Dear OpenBSD users, developers, contributors, My name is Mingjing a
> >> *BSD user and lover from China. My friend and I did some wallpapers for
> >> OpenBSD and other opensource project in the free time. For now they are

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