> On Aug 17, 2015, at 6:34 AM, NxtChg via bitcoin-dev 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Great, so how about you go tell theymos to stop censoring XT posts and 
> banning the other side on /r/Bitcoin?
> 
> Let users decide what Bitcoin is or isn't.

FWIW,

I don’t think what theymos did is very constructive.I understand his 
position…but it only hurts the cause, unfortunately - the PR battle is not the 
same thing as a discussion on technical merits. He hurts the PR battle and 
plays into Mike’s hand by doing that. The actual underlying issue actually has 
little to do with block size - it has to do with Mike and Gavin feeling that 
the core devs are being obstructionist.

Regardless of the technical merits of XT, the fact that we’ve never done a hard 
fork before, not even for things some other devs have wanted…and not due to any 
malice on anyone’s part but because simply that’s just the nature of 
decentralized consensus with well-defined settlement guarantees…this is the 
problem - Mike and Gavin think they’re somehow special and their fork should be 
pushed while the rest of us resist pushing our own controversial pet ideas 
because we want civility and understand that at this stage in Bitcoin’s 
development trying to fork the blockchain over highly divisive issues is 
counterproductive and destructive.

But the fact of the matter is that in the PR battle, arguments against the fork 
actually play into Mike’s hand, and that’s the problem.

The whole block size thing is too nuanced and too easily spun simplistically. 
It’s too easy to spin resistance to bigger blocks (even though the resistance 
is actually much more towards untested hardforking mechanisms and serious 
security concerns) as “obstructionism” and it’s too easy to spin bigger blocks 
as “scalability” because most of the people can’t tell the fucking difference.

The fact is most of the people don’t really understand the fundamental issue 
and are taking sides based on charismatic leadership and authority which is 
actually entirely counter to the spirit of decentralized consensus. It’s beyond 
ironic.

If you guys want to win the PR battle, the key is to make it clear that you are 
not obstructionist and are giving everyone equal treatment…Bitcoin was designed 
such that changing the rules is *hard* and this is a feature. Bitcoin simply 
does not have a reliable and tested hard forking mechanism…and a hard fork for 
such a politically divisive issue will almost certainly lead to a lack of 
cooperation and refusal to work together out of spite. All of us would like to 
be able to process more transactions on the network. It’s not a matter of 
whether we think higher capacity is a bad thing - it’s more that some of us are 
concerned that Bitcoin is not sufficiently mature to be able to handle such a 
schism with so much hostility.

Let’s face it, folks - from a PR standpoint, the block size issue is 
irrelevant. Nobody really understands it except for a handful of people - I’ve 
tried to explain it, I’ve even written articles about it - but most people just 
don’t get it. Most people don’t really get scalability either - they seem to 
think that scalability is just doing the same thing you’ve always done manyfold.

Block size is an especially dangerous issue politically because it’s one of 
those that requires deep understanding yet superficially sounds really simple. 
It’s perfect Dunning-Kruger bait.

So let’s be a little smarter about this.

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