> Ultimately Go is a community and polls are unavoidable. And even in
> the benevolent-dictator model, the dictator is forced by the
> community if the pressure is high enough, this has happened in a lot
> of projects like Vim and Python. And in Vim some changes only
> happened after the adoption of the NeoVim fork created community
> pressure.
>
> The community will be the force driving the project whether you want
> it or not, the difference is that the Go team is actively seeking
> feedback, instead of letting the things get out of control, and only
> then patching it up.

That's fair enough, if that is how it is. Then surely forking Go is not
going to be a problem because a large enough part of the community is
very much against changing Go.

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