Thanks Tom for articulating how maddening it is to discover that an event
from which you had hoped to learn and in which you hoped to engage turns
out to be ruined by this sort of unthinking. Thanks to Sarah for bringing
Tom's words to our attention.
By way of cheerful contrast, I share an experience wholly uplifting.
While waiting in the queue the other day for a session of the French Film
Festival to start, I had a wonderful conversation with a woman who, in
response to my tentative confession that the volunteer work I did was for
Wikipedia, exclaimed with huge smile on her face: "Wikipedia! I LOVE
Wikipedia!" "Oh?" I said. "Yes, I use it every day and it has never
let me
down." She told me she donates every year "with joy" because it
"repays a
thousandfold". When she buys lottery tickets she mentally pledges money ("a
lot", she emphasised) to the project if she wins.
She would like to be an editor when she retires but the world apparently
will not let her retire yet; it keeps calling her back to work (her field
is Arts Management, I think). She is 74 and fully employed. I was the first
Wikipedian she had ever met and she made me feel as if I was solely
responsible for some sort of miraculous gift.
I asked if she would like to have her image on the on the fund raiser but
no, here is a real "user" of Wikipedia who wants to be anonymous.
"Anonymous, anonymous", she insisted. "You know my thoughts on the matter,
just think of me as your friend in the queue". And I do.
Whiteghost.ink
On 24 March 2012 08:40, Asaf Bartov <asaf.bartov(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On Fri, Mar 23, 2012 at 11:39 AM, Sarah Stierch
<sarah.stierch(a)gmail.com>wrote;wrote:
Hi everyone. I wanted to share a blog that came
across my radar today.
I've always been one to channel my rage into action, more than comfortably
verbally expressing myself through blogs. So, it's always nice when I read
a blog that basically verbalizes my own personal frustrations and rage, and
well, I didn't have to write it. :)
Fellow Wikipedian, Tom Morris, wrote a wonderful blog that channeled his
own frustrations and bluntly takes a look at sexism within the geek
landscape and the concepts of booth babes, verbalized sexism and more, and
all with a queer spin, something rarely expressed by men (queer women
generally have no problem expressing these frustrations!).
http://blog.tommorris.org/post/19778985050/newsflash-sexism-in-geek-communi…
Nicely said, Tom!
A.
--
Asaf Bartov <asaf.bartov(a)gmail.com>
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