Adam Porter schrieb:
Right now, Mozilla could try to decide who it is willing to offend: those that 
demanded Eich's resignation, or those who are appalled at his resignation--more 
specifically, those who blame Mozilla for it.  Whatever Mozilla does, some 
people will be offended.  If Mozilla does nothing, some people will be offended.

As we have no political agenda in those regards, at least as a community, we do not want to offend any of those groups broadly, and neither support any of them broadly. What we want instead is to fight for making privacy and users controlling their online lives themselves one of the cornerstones of the Internet, creating real freedom and opportunity of choice for people using the World Wide Web. That agenda will also offend some people, sure, but then they are offended by our actual values and our mission, and not by a different political topic that is not our fight as a community and organization to fight (even though we have people with opinions on both sides of it within our community).

Please let use get back to our actual agenda of making freedom and core value of the Internet and the Open Web a reality for as many people on this world as possible.

And then we are back to what you said:

This is what Mozilla must do if it is to accomplish its long-term goals, which are in the 
interest of all people.  It won't be easy.  Enemies will be made.  But as Winston 
Churchill once said, "You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for 
something, sometime in your life."

KaiRo

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