Mozilla is not just a workplace. The vast majority of Mozillians aren't
employed by Mozilla. I was a Mozillian before I became an employee, and
I'll still be one if I ever stop being an employee. Mozilla is first and
foremost a community.

Mozilla is also a globally diverse community. The idea that "we don't
talk about X, Y and Z at work" is pretty Western, AIUI.

To my mind, employees are Mozillians who are fortunate enough to get
paid to do Mozilla stuff all day, but they are Mozillians and community
members first, and employees second. And as a community, a group of
friends working together on a common goal, as we go through life
together we discuss all sorts of things - just like any community does.
Unless we are in the rare case where we encounter an unfortunate direct
clash between that value and the law of a particular jurisdiction, I
think that value stands.

We need to learn to disagree well. That means accepting a diversity of
expressed views, including the view that you or anyone else is wrong
about something, and choosing one of the possible mature responses which
are:

1) Ignore it
2) Change your mind
3) Argue your case

This is as true in a discussion about the right way to architect layout
as it is in a discussion about whether MoCo should or even can be a
secular workplace (which started the Yammer thread which led me to write
my recent post).

I continue to deny that "everyone getting along" means that no-one must
ever talk about anything controversial in our community. I deny that
saying someone is wrong about something is "being divisive". I deny that
insulating people from community views different from their own improves
community cohesion; I think it actually drives us apart.

Choosing to be offended and then making "you offended someone" or "you
are being divisive" the cardinal sin can be just another way of
silencing people. (This is one way that people who object to "silencing"
silence people.)

> Because I open my planet feed and see someone evangelizing their
> religion to me. I'm not interested but I need to read the feed in order
> to keep up with the overall Mozilla community.

"Reading the feed" != "Reading every word of every post". As I
understand it, that's why Mike is proposing a topic sentence at the top,
so that you do not have to be upset by even a short part of such an
article passing under your eyes before you click "Next".

Gerv


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