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On Sun, Mar 28, 2004 at 02:15:57AM -0500, David Kramer wrote: > I am going to respectfully request that this discussion leave the > list. It's as interesting to me as the next person, but this just > isn't the place for it. Then, though I am myself no longer interested in this particular discussion, I will respectfully request that someone clarify what is and what is not on topic here. In my opinion, the answer is, "things which interest people who work with and/or use Unix and/or Linux." This is actually MORE specific than the mailing list description, which states the following: This is the general discussion list for the Boston Linux & Unix user group. This list is for all topics that don't have their own dedicated lists. Under either assumption, this discussion qualifies... Please correct my misconceptions, and/or the website. FWIW, the main reason I hold this opinion is two-fold: 1. Though this topic is not directly related to Linux or Unix in any way, it is directly related to why most of us use Linux or Unix. It's at least in part how we make our living. 2. Since it is clearly a topic which is important to a large number of posters, it is inherently on-topic in at least some sense. Such discussions will naturally, unavoidably, arise; I think that such a forum is as good a place as any to discuss them. I think that to stifle them is detrimental to the group. If you do not agree, in my opinion, the best course of action is to use your mailer to kill the thread, filter it out, or simply press the delete key. If your mailer doesn't offer any of these alternatives, then you are undoubtedly in need of a new mailer... ;-) A mailing list like this one will always have many discussions ongoing, and most users will not be interested in all of them. Often, on this list as with others, people will speak up in favor of killing a thread, whenever it has a political element. If I may be blunt, I think this is dumb. Why do we post here? Why do we read all the messages? Because they interest us. Because we want to engage in intelligent discourse, and possibly open our minds to new ideas, relating to Linux, Unix, and the reasons and the ways in which we use them. If politics affect those things, why shouldn't they be discussed here? Users of computers are often very political beings, and computers is itself becoming an increasinly political field. If the politics affecting our group is of interest to the group, then why shouldn't it be discussed here? -- Derek D. Martin http://www.pizzashack.org/ GPG Key ID: 0xDFBEAD02 -=-=-=-=- This message is posted from an invalid address. Replying to it will result in undeliverable mail. Sorry for the inconvenience. Thank the spammers. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: not available URL: <http://lists.blu.org/pipermail/discuss/attachments/20040328/219206f0/attachment.sig>
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