I don't see it that way. I see it as a proactive, positive step. Look, right now there's a lot of, well, not-so-nice people in the world. Many of them hang out online. This isn't PC, it's a fact of modern life. This isn't going to get better; I think it's getting worse if anything. Saying "hey, we're a friendly and welcoming community" isn't pandering, it's accepting that not everyone is nice, but saying we aim to be.
At least that's my 2 cents. On Thu, Dec 10, 2015 at 6:55 AM, Russel Winder <[email protected]> wrote: > I think there is an element of needing to pander to the culture of > political correctness. Some events and communities have had bad > processes and attitudes. Those needed to impose a CoC to try and amend > the behaviour of the not so nice element. However this has now become a > tool for labelling communities good or bad. If you do not have a COC > you are clearly a bad (sexist, racist, <put-your-favourite-ist-here>,…) > community because you do not have a CoC. Thus, there is now a need to > have a CoC to avoid the marketing pressure of the political correctness > police. > -- Gary
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