• Nevar@lemmy.ml
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    4 years ago

    Stallman is a 68 year old unpopular-with-the-ladies mansplaining type of guy that has a very crude humour and low interpersonal skills. He’s also a bit of a genius when it comes to software. He’s got a laundry list of things he’s said and done that are distasteful towards women. Nothing illegal however. He’s one of those guys that would rather be technically right than anything else.

    Unfortunately he’s a victim of mob justice and cancel culture.

    I don’t like Stallman, I do respect his contributions to the FOSS movement. I agree cancelling Stallman outside of due process is a really bad look for the FOSS movement.

      • roastpotatothief@lemmy.ml
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        4 years ago

        believe he was removed as President with good reason.

        Is that because of the

        things he’s said and done that are distasteful towards women

        ?

        Or was there another reason to remove him?

        (I am very out of the loop)

          • throwaway96581@lemmy.ml
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            4 years ago

            “allegedly”.

            Supposedly on his blog there is no bad attitude towards women at all, quite the opposite.

            There are people who searched it.

            He is uncoruptable like Sokrates. Probably the real reason.

            The misstreated women is used over and over to stir up drama to remove uncorruptible people.

            The uncorruptible part is clearly why every single company are against him.

            They fear loosing power to good free opensource software, that does not sell people lives.

            This what appears to be a storm in a glaswater drama just makes me trust him even more to be a genuine person.

            And I don’t know much about him.

            • roastpotatothief@lemmy.ml
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              4 years ago

              That makes sense. But if there really is a conspiracy, there will be evidence of it too. That’s the kind of thing anyone can research and find the evidence for … if it’s real.

          • roastpotatothief@lemmy.ml
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            4 years ago

            Okay so it’s not that he was doing a bad job or that they found someone else who would do a better job, and it’s not that he broke any explicit FSF rules or refused to obey an FSF rule.

            It’s thought-crime, essentially. He had strong and unpopular ideas, sany people disliked him, so he’s bad for the FSF’s image.

            But you could argue that that kind of creativity, the inclination to ignore convention and forcefully invent and argue for your own vision of that world - that’s a requirement for the job of leading the FSF.

            I haven’t had time to start doing my own research about him (given how influential he was in the course of 20th century history) but I will.

    • roastpotatothief@lemmy.ml
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      4 years ago

      I think I’d like him. He sounds great. I must listen to his lectures (or interviews or whatever he does mostly)

    • ster@lemmy.ml
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      4 years ago

      Cancel culture isn’t a real thing. Look at the man… he’s not fit to look after himself, let alonr represent a movement.