Luca and Isarra,
Thanks for the honest sharing. It's very much appreciated.
I learnt two further things from these discussions: First, opinions are
much more divergent between different political factions and geographical
locations of the world than I expected. Second, people have stronger
emotional attachment than I thought to the political cause they care about.
Perhaps the good work of Wikipedia administrators can give us a hint
towards the solution. We try to make everybody feel represented and still
be able to make decisions. This is even easier in online communities than
real life because everyone's opinions are laid out on the same page.
We can go further and put in affirmative procedures to make minorities feel
welcome. An active preference for diversity will be much appreciated.
Deryck
On 11 Jul, 2016 12:01 am, "Luca Martinelli" <martinelliluca(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Dear Deryck,
there's a good deal of reasons why there's an etiquette rule in Italy
that states "don't talk about politics at the dinner table". :)
I'm sorry if you felt excluded by us EU citizens, especially by those
(as I am) who deeply care about the future of the EU. If it can be of
any good, quite all of us Italian wikimedians were in absolute shock
when we found out about the outcome of the elections. Most of us
actually thought "remain" would have won.
I will not deny that I was angered by the results. I felt betrayed -
literally - by one of the people I respect and love the most among my
European brethren, and it saddened me the most since it's not rhetoric
when I say that I do consider of the utmost importance the UK
contribution to the EU.
Moreover, please believe me when I say that most of my anger comes
from the fact that I didn't want you to experience the economic and
political troubles you're experiencing right now, and that your
country decided nonetheless to bring on its own head by its own
decision. I feel like I'm watching a friend doing something stupid,
something we all unsuccessfully begged not to do - we all knew this
would end badly, and now we all need to cope with the after-effects we
wanted to avoid.
I do understand your attempts at looking the glass half-full, but
probably it wasn't just "the right time". Probably, it won't be for
quite some time for some of us. It will surely be a sensitive issue
for me for a long, long time.
That doesn't mean that, if someone offended you because of your ideas
and/or the general outcome of the elections, he/she did the right
thing -- he/she didn't. You're entitled to your opinion and your
ideas, as well as you're entitled not to be "charged" with the
responsibility of a choice in which you had a negligible part. In
other words, it's not your fault if your opinion (my opinion) didn't
win the referendum.
If this happened, I'm truly sorry. I've had my share of lashing
because of my ideas in my life, and I do know how awful this is.
Unfortunately, that's life.
Wikipedia shouldn't be as bitter as life, though. I am a strong
supporter of keeping my ideas in my pocket when I edit Wikipedia or
any other Wikimedia project. I try to be as neutral as I can, and if I
can't I just excuse myself from the discussion. I did it lots of
times, I'll continue to do so. This is what I think it's a "friendly
and inclusive" atmosphere should be, as long as the "xkcd clause"[1]
should not be applied.
[1]
https://xkcd.com/1357/
L.
2016-07-09 23:51 GMT+02:00 Deryck Chan <deryckchan(a)gmail.com>om>:
I apologise for the somewhat emotionally charged
post. Please read to the
end and I promise my argument will come together...
Wikimania 2016 gave me more emotional hot air than any other previous
Wikimania except the one I organised (2013). But unusually, the hot air
didn't arise from disputes about Wikimedia chapter governance or
conference
(dis)organisation. It was about Brexit.
(For the record, I thought Wikimania Esino was amazingly well-operated.)
Before Wikimania, I had already set out my attitude towards Brexit on a
Facebook note. I've reposted it on my user-space on the Wikimania 2016
wiki
so I won't repeat my arguments at length:
https://wikimania2016.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Deryck_Chan/The_reluctant_Rem…
The title of my post gives it away - I'm lukewarm towards Brexit.
At Wikimania, the topic of Brexit naturally brought itself up in many
mealtime conversations between me and Wikimaniacs from other EU
countries.
My opinion on the matter often took conversations
towards unhappy
disagreement, and I would feel excluded from subsequent conversation on
the
same table.
I've never felt so rejected at Wikimania. Most heated debate at
Wikimania I
was involved in took the form of "us vs.
y'all", so as inflamed as a
debate
may have been, there would be a "my
side". But not this time. My unusual
perspective as a non-white British (and EU, until UK formally withdraws)
citizen meant that I had a perspective that was shared by very few
others at
Wikimania. It was like "me vs everyone
else".
I felt disenfranchised enough by the referendum debate itself as a
non-white
citizen of the UK. I felt sad enough that I voted
Remain but Leave won. I
wanted to share the little bit of hope I still had about the future, on
the
day Leave was declared victorious, and wasn't
appreciated.
I shared my feelings with Daria Cybulska (WMUK staff, Polish origin) and
she
reminded me to be "sensitive" of other
people in discussion... an
instruction I immediately fell foul of in that discussion, as I forgot
that
the UK's withdrawal from the EU will mean
fewer opportunities for people
with similar backgrounds to Daria, as much as the EU's protectionist
tendencies have been reducing the opportunities for people with similar
backgrounds to me.
Okay, enough Brexit chat. I promised my argument would come together.
In her Wikimania keynote, Katherine Maher said one of the things WMF
would
prioritise in the next year is to make our
communities a "friendly and
inclusive space".
I'm a six-time Wikimaniac; and in-person meetings are known to facilitate
more amicable debates than online discussions. But because of my unique
background, even I fell foul of the standards of sensitivity in
communication, and as a result felt unwelcome.
Now imagine someone from a far-flung corner of Wikimedia-sphere joining
Wikimania for the first time. Or a prospective new editor from a
far-flung
corner of Earth clicking [edit] for the first
time. When there's
disagreement in which the newcomer has a unique perspective, will they
feel
included?
I don't claim to have the magic bullet. But thanks to Brexit happening
during Wikimania 2016, now I understand the sheer magnitude of the
problem.
I feel encouraged that Katherine and the WMF are
making it a leading
priority for the next year to foster a "friendly and inclusive" community
atmosphere.
I'm not sure which one is easier to solve: the political mess of today's
Europe, or the hostile mess of online communities. But for both, I shall
remain hopeful and do my part to make our communities better.
Deryck
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Luca "Sannita" Martinelli
http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utente:Sannita
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