On Fri, 26 Mar 2021 at 08:25, Andrey Rahmatullin <[email protected]>

> Obviously if you view things differently, you can vote your conscience.

> This sounds like (and this is really a popular opinion inside and outside
> Debian) the FSF is the problem, not just RMS, and it's not clear to me
> whether anything will be actually fixed if RMS holds fewers positions
> inside FSF.
>

I've read many comments on this subject, and  this is the closest that one
has come to the question I've not seen asked yet: Will Debian continue to
support and partner with the FSF if Rms leaves or stays?

There seems to be a lot of doubt about the FSF's operations itself, current
and historical, and not all of it due to Rms. This discussion has served
for some to highlight issues people have (including that FSF appears to
like criticising Debian).

One wonders if the bigger picture is being missed. When the mob has
finished speaking and is standing outside Frankenstein's castle clutching
their torches and pitchforks, hearts filled with righteousness. What
happens then?

So - Are the FSF's objectives AND methods compatible with Debian?

If not, then the rms issue as far as Debian is concerned is moot. No need
for badly written open letters. No need for shaming. No need for a witch
hunt. Just a brief statement that the FSF's ideals and operations are
incompatible with Debian's.

If they are compatible, then they are no matter who is at the helm -
that's likely to be Rms by the way - if they haven't acted yet, it's likely
they'll continue as they are. Thick skins and no shareholders.

S

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