On Nov 29, 2007 11:14 AM, jayjg jayjg99@gmail.com wrote:
The facts of the situation are that on November 3 Durova sent a "lesson in spotting returning editors" to the cyberstalking list, where, according to all reports, it received little attention and even less response. *Fifteen days later* Durova blocked !!, and 72 minutes after that unblocked !!.
When was the email originally made public, in what forum, and under what pretense? I don't expect you to answer this, but maybe someone else can fill me in or that missing link?
Since then there has been an ever increasing tide of hysteria surrounding this 72 minute block, with multiple AN, wikien-l, and other threads, an RFC, posting of private e-mails, OFFICE removals of same, leaking of membership lists, and now an ArbCom case which appears to be rapidly reaching a conclusion.
A lot of what you call "hysteria" doesn't seem to be over the block so much as the mailing lists themsevles. The block is apparently what brought the email to light, and the email is what brought to light the mailing lists, which most of us knew nothing about until the email was made public.
Durova has already voluntarily given up her adminship status, something I do not believe the ArbCom would have removed from her.
I certainly hope they would have. The email showed a lack of ability to engage in the type of logical reasoning necessary to be a good admin, and from what I've seen her response so far has been equally lacking.
While some may still think there is value in insisting that witnesses should be subpoenaed here to name names, I think it's time to call this House Committee on Un-Wikipedian Activities to a close.
I find it humorous how much hypocrisy there is in this whole incident. Telling people to assume good faith in response to an enormous assumption of bad faith; comparing the demand for answers about a group of investigators trying to uncover anyone who is now or ever has associated themselves with Wikipedia Review to McCarthyism...