On 6/16/07, James Farrar
<james.farrar(a)gmail.com> wrote:
She probably didn't reply because she
(understandably) saw it as an
attack, not a question, it being the first she'd heard about it
(AIUI).
Well, no. The first s/he heard about it was when s/he first used an
open proxy to edit.
It's kind of odd to attack someone for asking, during your RfA, why
you're violating policy every single time you make an edit, yet want
to be in a position where you can block others for policy violations.
It's hypocrisy. If you want to change policy, argue for that change
openly and honestly; don't sneak around in the night.
It's not hypocrisy to violate one policy yet want to be in a position
to enforce others. OTOH, it is hypocrisy to pretend that you believe
in a rule but let people get away with breaking it without trying to
do anything about it.