On the topic of social contracts and communities, I'd like to invite anyone who's interested to take a look at the draft version of the Code of Conduct for Wikimedia Technical Spaces - https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Code_of_conduct_for_technical_spaces/Draft. Any feedback is welcome on the talk page.

On Thu, Oct 8, 2015 at 1:11 PM, Moriel Schottlender <moriel@gmail.com> wrote:
moriel, i do not agree to the abstraction you introduce here. a
community consists of persons afaik. it is a person which feels, not a
community. if there is a rule for the community its purpose is to
apply to a person part of the community. sarah sharp tried to make a
rule "do not curse or go away". as linus torvalds curses from time to
time it is not rocket science to understand that rule as: (1) linus
please change and do not curse, or (2) linus please leave the
community if you cannot stop cursing.

I am simplifying the bottom line, because the bottom line is fairly simple.

When a group of individuals form a community, they are no longer completely individuals; they have set for themselves a social contract that binds them. We can discuss the minutia of the social contract forever, of course, as these arguments went for ages, from John Locke's extensive individual liberties, to Hobbes' absolute authoritative rule, to Jean Jack Rousseau's general will -- but that still leaves the conclusion the same: What type of community do we *want* to have? 

I find it somewhat ironic that we are arguing for respecting an almost absolute individual rights and liberties of people in the community who are (sometimes self-professed) assholes and bully others, but we neglect the individual rights and liberties of the people who are being bullied. The entire point of having a *community* (rather than a disconnected grouping of individuals) is to find the balance to give the liberties to its members not on the expense of other members' liberties.

And yet, it seems that in the arguments that are raised, the "sides" keep being presented as the extreme choices, as if no other middle ground is available. That is false, and we don't have to read historical philosophical treatises to see that.

The option is not to either "have liberty" or "be oppressed". That is a strawman representation of our options. There are many more options, which many governments and societies around the world adapt -- some more successfully than others -- without crushing the individual rights of people who don't seem to care about the individual rights of others.

Sarah Sharp's leaving Linux' community is not about Linus Torvalds' individual rights to be an asshole. He can continue being an asshole all he wants, and he, I assume, knows the pros and cons of being an asshole in his personal life. It's his right, and he deserves to make that personal choice.

The community of people who gathered for a shared purpose, however, needs to make a conscious, collective decision about the type of community they care to have. That is the point of having a community in the first place.

It is a very simple give and take, a simple mathematical consideration: You get one thing on the expense of another, such is life.
Which is why in life, most often, we look for middle ground rather than extremes.

If the social contract the community agrees on implicitly or explicitly results in making certain sub-groups marginalized, bullied and feel unwelcome, then these groups will not stay as part of that community.

If the community thinks this is a correct price to pay for absolute liberties, then all the John Locke for it.

If, however, we recognize that this price is too steep -- and that the "corrective step" of "don't be a jerk to others" is acceptable -- then the community should demonstrate it in its social contract and find the balance between oppressing the bullies and supporting the bullied.

I don't see what's so complicated in this concept, really. We're just making it complicated by concentrating on the small details.

So I will repeat my paragraph from my first email, the one that makes everything really really simple:

"If people don't think that having an abusive community is a problem, then they should understand they are *losing* the people they are abusing, and keeping the people who are abusing others. That means that we are not keeping the good contributors and weeding out the lazy/bad contributors -- it means we're keeping the jerks, whether they're effective contributors or not, and weeding out the ones who give up and don't want to be abused, whether they're awesome or not."


 

>>> On Wed, Oct 7, 2015 at 12:44 PM, rupert THURNER
>>> <rupert.thurner@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> to let wikipedia NPOV also have a word, here what linus torvalds
>>>> thought about it two years ago:
>>>>    http://marc.info/?l=linux-kernel&m=137392506516022&w=2
>>>> in a summary, torvalds argues that sarah sharp should accept that
>>>> people are different and act different, she should not try to change
>>>> linus torvalds.
>>>
>>>> > On Oct 7, 2015 6:44 AM, "Jason Radford" <jsradford@uchicago.edu>
>>>> > wrote:
>>>> >>
>>>> >> I think folks here will understand this story.
>>>> >>
>>>> >> http://sarah.thesharps.us/2015/10/05/closing-a-door/

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