For David...

http://www.jamesjheaney.com/2014/04/08/re-your-ire-is-misdirected/

Re: Your Ire Is Misdirected

Hi, Gerv,

I'm sure you're inundated, and you sure as heck don't know me, so there's no 
need to respond to this.  But I really appreciated your post the other day, and 
wanted to share my reaction with you.  Perhaps it will be of some use in 
figuring out Mozilla recovers from this catastrophe.

As I see it, there are still two big reasons why I and people like me -- 
broadly speaking -- are going to have to withhold support Mozilla for the 
foreseeable future, even after our current anger subsides:

(1) In your post, you give the public your assurance that Brendan really did 
leave of his own accord; that he really wasn't forced out; that the Board 
actually fought to retain him as CEO.  The problem is that your assurance is 
not a very strong authority outside Mozilla's walls, and it has to be weighed 
against the evidence.  This certainly looked, from the outside, like a standard 
corporate decapitation, where the Board decided to fire the CEO and allowed the 
CEO to "resign" only to retain his own dignity.

We saw Brendan promising never to resign just a couple days before he did.  We 
watched Robert George predict -- to all appearances accurately -- how this was 
going to play out. We heard the dead silence from the principal players.  (Why 
hasn't Brendan said a word in defense of Mozilla since he left?) We noticed 
that all other accounts of his resignation say the Board tried to retain 
Brendan as CTO -- but pointedly not as CEO. Above all, we read Mitchell's (very 
unfortunate) blog post on Resignation Day.  In that post, she seemed to concede 
that Brendan never should have been hired, that "equality" trumps free speech 
in this case, and that Mozilla's biggest takeaway from all this is that, given 
the chance to do it all again, they'd have fired Brendan even faster.

In this light, your anonymous sources are just not very convincing, even given 
your bona fides as Mozilla's last public marriage traditionalist.  (Perhaps 
especially given those bona fides: what happened to you two years ago would 
seem to support the suggestion that Mozilla's commitment to inclusion is 
skin-deep at best.)

(2) Even if you are absolutely right, and leaving was entirely Brendan's idea, 
it still sends a terrible message to the world: "Mozilla can be bullied.  We 
cannot protect our leader from a bunch of petty thought police on the internet. 
 We will leave him on the front line, alone, to take 100% of the incoming fire, 
and then we'll thrust the blame on 'outsiders' when the wounds take him out."  
If that's the case, then perhaps Mozillans really do still believe in the 
radical inclusion the project was founded on -- but it hardly matters, because 
Mozilla is no longer calling the shots.  The bullies have taken control, and 
Mozilla is impotent to resist their imperious will.

In either case, Mozilla is not something many of us feel we can be a part of -- 
or should be -- right now.

You mention forgiveness.  If Mozilla wants forgiveness (and I am not even 
convinced that it wants to be forgiven as forgotten right now), I think it will 
have to demonstrate some level of repentance and some level of autonomy.

First, repentance: Mozilla must recognize that what happened was not a 
causeless tragedy that mysteriously destroyed the co-founder like a bolt of 
lightning.  This happened because the entire community failed.  It wasn't just 
the few who raised their voices in protest against Brendan.  It was also those 
who were publicly ambivalent and conflicted (there were so many!), and even 
those who supported Brendan but refused to put their foot down and demand that 
he be retained.  The community either openly attacked or (more often) simply 
failed to defend either the principles of the project or the concrete policies 
that give those principles life.  The community's reluctance to close ranks 
around the project - not the CEO or his particular beliefs, but the whole 
concept of an open-source browser that everyone can be part of -- was the key 
fact that made the subsequent media bonfire successful.  It was a sin by the 
entire community, and it needs to be acknowledged and addressed by the whole 
community, not just in individual "I feel sad we lost Brendan" posts on Planet 
Mozilla.

Second, autonomy: social conservatives need to know that Mozilla not only 
regrets what happened to Brendan, but that it has the desire and ability to 
make sure that nothing like it will ever happen again.  That people who have 
"offensive" political opinions still have a place at Mozilla, that our 
contributions are valued, and that we can even become leaders within the 
organization.  That Mozilla has not been conquered by ideological interests at 
Slate and Salon and OKCupid, but remains a genuinely global project that 
embraces literally anyone who is willing to work toward the (crucial!) goal of 
a free and open web.
I don't know how Mozilla might go about doing this, and (unlike those who waged 
war last week) I don't presume to dictate terms.  I only know that Mozilla has 
done absolutely nothing whatsoever since the resignation to restore our sense 
that it is a "safe space," and I know that it cannot ever do that without 
positive action of some kind.  When a university administration is accused of 
discriminating against racial minorities, they will often establish programs 
and endowments to ensure that members of those minorities are hired and are 
able to contribute to the university project without fear of reprisal or undue 
discomfort.  Perhaps (perhaps) something along the same lines for ideological 
minorities would help restore the public trust.

For now, however, I'm afraid I won't be on my favorite browser, and neither 
will my clients.  This is written from Chrome, which is gross... but at least I 
know I could go to Google and have a productive career there despite my private 
beliefs... even if they harvest all the data about my private beliefs and sell 
it to the NSA.

I don't know where the open web goes from here, but, fundamentally, a web 
controlled by the same forces that led to Brendan's resignation is not an open 
web at all -- except for those privileged to have the "right" opinions.  That 
means Mozilla, as it currently looks from out here, as it currently operates, 
cannot carry forward the open-web ideal -- not until this is addressed and 
corrected.

Maybe this all looks completely different from within the Mozilla community. I 
don't know; I'm pretty much just a longtime fan and user and promoter, not a 
contributor.  And there are my two cents.


-- 
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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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