On Tue, Sep 23, 2014 at 4:21 AM, Johannes Schlüter
<johan...@schlueters.de> wrote:

> The approach I have in mind is going back to a consensus model by
> default, allowing truly everybody to participate and giving the
> opportunity to call for a vote if consensus can't be reached.

It never worked in the last decade+, what makes you think it will work
all of a sudden?

All I see is some being afraid to loose control while all RFCs show
that it is by far not the case. The active core devs did not loose
control and we reached many consensuses. We have a couple of issues
but the roots of them are very clear. All is all there is no reason to
go back in a very bad time for php.

> Given our
> social diversity I however think that this hardly works out as there
> always will be somebody calling for a vote ... obvious consequence would
> be a quorum for calling for a vote .. wich ends up in even more
> bureaucracy hell.

There is no bureaucracy hell but an end to endless discussions,
pressures, and other nonconstructive behaviors. The recent RFC events
about starting, ending, counting are unlucky but easily fixable.

Cheers,
-- 
Pierre

@pierrejoye | http://www.libgd.org

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