No good deed goes unpunished.

I urge wikimedia DC to treat this with all due respect.

I leave it to you to calculate just how much respect is due in the case of this sort of malarkey.

Best,

David in DC

Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4G LTE DROID


ResearchBiz <ResearchBiz@gmail.com> wrote:

On October 13 (over a month ago), I submitted a Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) request to the National Archives, with a courtesy copy
addressed to Kirill Lokshin, James Hare, and the Safe Space Committee
affiliated with Wikiconference USA 2015.

I had hoped for Wikimedia DC's help in this matter, because I think
it's very important in resolving the increasing tension that seems to
exist between the First Amendment right of unabridged free speech, vs.
the rising perception that there is a privilege not to ever have one's
feelings hurt by unabridged speech.  I spoke today with the NARA
employee who is supervising the response to the FOIA request, and it
sounds like they are assembling quite a substantial amount of
information that will be delivered back to me, likely in the next two
weeks, I am told.

In stark contrast, I have not heard any response from the leaders of
Wikimedia DC, even though their code of ethics asserts that personnel
should:

* Serve with courtesy and responsiveness
* Demonstrate the highest standards of personal
integrity,truthfulness, honesty, and fortitude
* Conduct organizational and operational duties with open communication

It's possible that Lokshin and Hare have not received my request from
October 13, but I doubt that's the case.  Time is running out for the
leadership of Wikimedia DC to proactively state their position on the
concerns addressed in the NARA FOIA request.

Sincerely,

A concerned citizen

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