This is the last email I am going to send on the specifics of me not liking
the response I got on this thread. I have a follow-up email that will
hopefully get us back on topic.

Here's an excerpt of what you chose to email me privately:

> Now, you have claimed that you have been suffering from prejudice and
discrimination in the past, but I have no recollection of actual examples,
where there really was an unacceptable behavior conducted AND that there
were no repercussions from the ASF. Without examples, you are making
unsubstantiated claims and hypotheticals, and those are really hard to
discuss, due the the vagueness and rhetoric that accompanies those. With a
public record, where you can point at "Look, here.... this... that... and X
said, and Y defended..." then that is something you can use to convince me
that this is not about a cry-baby and victimhood culture that people are
trying to breed at ASF, with the silent support of those who are scared of
speaking up against it, because they don't want to be cast in unfavorable
light.

"you have claimed"
"I have no recollection of actual examples"
"you are making unsubstantiated claims and hypotheticals"

I'm reporting on my feelings. They're not "unsubstantiated claims" because
I don't need to substantiate my emotions. If I tell you I had a bad time,
you ought to just accept it. They're certainly not hypotheticals either. I
wish.

Do you see how this language you've chosen, and indeed the approach you've
taken, contribute to the invalidation of my emotional and psychological
state?

You make it clear that unless I convince you, personally, that I am right
to feel the way I feel, you will categorise the act of sharing my feelings
an attempt to spread a "cry-baby and victimhood culture".

This is not the way we should be responding to people who are saying "I had
a bad time".

Maybe if someone was saying "I had a bad time, so take these specific
punitive measures against these specific people". Then we would want to
collect documentary evidence. We'd want to understand the ins and the outs
of the situation. But that would fall to the appropriate group of people,
who would want to do it sensitively, and in private.

Emailing random people you've seen posting on a mailing list about having a
bad time and challenging them to justify themselves to you is not okay
behaviour. But I am going to stop talking about this now. I don't think I
can explain it any better than this. Perhaps someone else can chime in if
they think they can help.




On Wed, 16 Nov 2016 at 03:17 Niclas Hedhman <nic...@hedhman.org> wrote:

> On Wed, Nov 16, 2016 at 8:46 AM, Noah Slater <nsla...@apache.org> wrote:
> > You misunderstand. This isn't about replacing one type of assumption
> about
> > your intentions with another type. Instead, it's about holding people
> > accountable for their actions (and the effects of those actions)
> > irrespective of their intentions.
>
> Please explain or elaborate what you mean by "accountable". If
> "accountable" means "Hey, you should not have..." with a "Oh, sorry about
> that, my mistake" reply, then I have no problem. If it means "Hey, X said
> Y, ban..." (which is what I read in the word 'enforcement'), then I do have
> a big problem with that.
>
> > As has been mentioned on this thread already, not many people explicitly
> > set out to send a harmful email. And yet many harmful emails are probably
> > sent to our lists daily.
>
> And likewise, many people are reminded daily that emails are difficult
> medium to communicate in and that words often can be read in more than one
> way.
>
> > You sent me a private email saying, effectively: "Suppose you are right
> > about what you claim to have experienced, I have yet to see the evidence.
> > Please dig up that evidence and show it to me to convince me you're not
> > just a cry-baby."
>
> Do you want me to post it full here? Because, I didn't say "you", I said
> "people"... and you may have chosen to include yourself in that. "People
> commit murders" --> "He just called me a murderer!", do you see the
> parallel?  Again, I think this shows the problem of expressing oneself in
> email, since it is impossible to anticipate every possible interpretation,
> both among native speakers and those that are less fluent.
>
> > It certainly doesn't engender any confidence that you would take me
> > seriously and not challenge me point by point, if I were to go to that
> > herculean effort of documenting all the things that contributed to my
> > emotional burnt out over the years.
>
> I didn't ask for "all the things". I asked "what [changes] in ASF could
> have led to an outcome that satisfied you."
> Instead, you hand waved a "This is a thoroughly horrible email for you to
> have sent me. " without further explanation, and now you say that it was
> because you think I called you a "cry-baby" when I didn't;  <quote>convince
> me that this is not about a cry-baby and victimhood culture that people are
> trying to breed at ASF</quote>
> I also assumed (perhaps incorrectly) that you are a native speaker, and
> that you wouldn't have problem parsing my language. If I thought otherwise,
> I would indeed have constructed simpler sentences.
>
> > When we harm someone (for our purposes, let's assume unintentionally) the
> > person we harmed is usually not in the best place to do the emotional
> > labour necessary to explain why they are upset, or what was done wrong.
> >
> > This is where we find utility in shared community standards, clearly
> > documented in things like a code of conduct.
>
> I agree, and we have a Code of Conduct. I have no issue with people who
> speak out against ad hominems and name calling, and I agree that such
> behavior is unacceptable. What I do have a problem with is words like "feel
> safe". It is subjective and the ASF can not institute any mechanisms to
> make that a reality, other than banning criticism, debate and frankly
> anything that is not a lambda expression (free of side-effects). Being
> criticized on technical merit, conflicting opinions on possible ideas and
> similar non-personal topics, should not in my opinion be curbed. I think
> that is not the intention, but some people may think that is "feeling
> unsafe"...
>
> > These are not tools to bash people around head with. They are learning
> > resources. If there was a page somewhere that said "when someone is
> > reporting having had a bad experience, try to listen, believe, and
> support
> > them" (and so on) I could say "hey, I think what you did is in violation
> of
> > this principal". And then maybe other people with more energy than me,
> who
> > are less emotionally invested in what just happened, can talk to you
> about
> > it.
>
> Yes, this is very good argument and something I fully support. I would also
> appreciate language in Code of Conduct and "goals for diversity" page to
> that effect, i.e. "education", "promotion", "encouragement" and "peer
> support", rather than the very harsh "enforcement" (maybe I am too
> sensitive to that word, after living in China too long).
> I have just posted a proposal to change that "correct" what I take issue
> with.
>
> Cheers
> --
> Niclas Hedhman, Software Developer
> http://zest.apache.org - New Energy for Java
>

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