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Author: tito
Date:  
To: dng
Subject: Re: [DNG] OT democracy (was Re: bookworm without systemd)
On Sun, 23 Jul 2023 12:56:47 +0100
Manfred Wassmann via Dng <dng@???> wrote:

> On Sunday, July 23, 2023, Martin Steigerwald <martin@???> wrote:
>
> > However when asking this question I come to the conclusion that this is
> > due to factors within the Debian community that are not easy to change.
> > Factors which are often enough related to power play and manipulative
> > communication. Debian is not a democracy. It never was. (Mind you, neither
> > is Germany for example. At most it is a simulation of something they call a
> > democracy.)
> >
>
> Right, the political system in Germany and not only there is anarchy,
> probably the most really existing anarchy in the world. People do what they
> want, some more some less reluctantly. Every now and then the police
> intervenes but that also depends on their mood, political influence and
> other more or less random factors. Yet even if the police intervenes the
> outcome often is nothing, also dependent on diverse more or less random
> factors. So if you got it, you just do what you think is right without
> being bothered - some people use that to spray encicrcled A's onto the
> walls, funny, isn't it?
>
> And what you write about the Debian community, well, that is what really
> existing anarchy looks like.
>
>
>


Man, I think you got so used to democracy that you wouldn't spot one
even if you fall with your nose on it. A democracy is as good as its
citizens are, it is not that "the others" have to do democracy for you,
you want it you fight for it. Supposed anarchy is always a good excuse,
but we wouldn't be about 9billion people on this planet if the anarchy
you talk about really existed.

Ciao,
farmatito