This is another one of these cases where developers do not think of the
consequences of their actions on the common user downstream.  Sure, Mr.
Langasek, ia32-libs is a "monstrosity", but users prefer a monstrosity
that works for them to the technically elegant solution that you imposed
on them and that only cause them pains.

Software behaviours like this one are difficult for the general public
to understand.   if it ain't broken, don't fix it.  Or for this case:
leave these ugly transitional packages in place until the last of the
users no longer needs it, even if it means keeping them around for
eternity.  Better an eternity with ugly transitional packages, than
users migrating back to Windows in frustration to software purism.

Specifically in my case, this change motivated my father-in-law to go
back to Windows.  An upgrade to Saucy and his Canon printer stopped
working.  Who is at fault for this?

Of course you will point your finger at Canon.  My in-law does not care.
He needs a working printer and so this Christmas I found that my work
weaning him off Windows has been thwarted by this change.  Worse: when I
tried to get things working again (and I am tenacious and have a little
bit of Linux experience under my belt), I wasted four hours, managed to
make it work on my laptop, but not on his desktop.  Probably because on
my laptop there were some i386 libraries installed previously.  Go
figure which ones.

By leaving us users out in the cold like this, you lose us!

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1241327

Title:
  missing ia32-libs package on Saucy (13.10)

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