Hello Quiliro, On Mon, 22 Aug 2011 12:19:50 -0500 Quiliro Ordóñez <[email protected]> wrote:
> It is OK to use the terms in a positive way but not to be distracted > from the issue of freedom. A position more according to FSF and in the > positive sense as you propose would be: "Use ONLY free software to be in > control of your computer". Using only free software is the ideal situation, the goal that have to be reached. But you can't reach people if you claim you possess the absolute truth and all others do not. So one must lead people towards free software carefully, one step at a time. If someone told you he wanted to replace, let's say, MS Office with Libre Office on his proprietary system, would you assist him in installing it? Or would you decline and say "first you must run a completely free system like Trisquel, and then I help you"? The FSF supports installing software on proprietary system as a first step, see http://www.fsf.org/working-together/moving/windows/ At http://www.fsf.org/working-together/gang/ the FSF even endorses FreeBSD, which is known to have proprietary software in their ports. (personally I think, FreeBSD shouldn't be listed there. If they must list a BSD system it should be OpenBSD, which has, in contrast to FreeBSD, an explicit free software agenda). What I want to say with that is, that the FSF is more diverse then you perhaps know. Their argumentation is quite diverse as well. Many aspects speak for free software, ethical, technological, economical, security reasons and so on. Why should one concentrate only on one line of argument? If I can't someone convince with the "software freedom" argument, why shouldn't I try the "security" argument (and frankly, I have been more successful with the security argument in the past). The FSF uses such "technical" arguments as well. > >> Freedom takes sacrifice. > > George W. Bush, 2005, about the war in Iraq > > You cannot compare searching for freedom with attacking another country > and killing people. I do not propose hurting anybody or killing people > for the sake of freedom. That is contradictory. Please do not use that > type of camparison. It makes me feel you think that I am equal to that > terrible person. It is for me as if I would compare you to Hitler. My apologies, I don't wanted to compare you with Bush. I wanted to show where a view that claims to be the absolute truth can lead. You compared proprietary software with hunger and death. I think proprietary software is wrong, but I wouldn't compare it with scourges of humanity. Like a Christian who may think that Paganism is wrong, or a Socialist that Capitalism is wrong. They try to change it, but they certainly don't have an agenda to eradicate it (disregarding small extreme factions). The problem is, if you say, that a certain philosophy or idea is so evil as hunger and death you make the first step in spreading hatred. Not only towards that philosophy or idea but to the people who stand for it as well. The next person who hear you say, that a philosophy or an idea is so evil, may come to the conclusion that the people who are standing for this idea are evil as well and should be punished. Before you know it there will be hatred against other people, with all its consequences. Spreading hatred is always wrong, no matter for which cause. Regards, Henry
