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Wow...<br>
<br>
I am bringing this on-list because I feel the whole community needs to
be reminded of the Code of Conduct, the spirit of Ubuntu, and plainly,
rudeness aimed at each other and new users as of late on the list.<br>
<br>
>From UbuntuLinux.org : <i>"Ubuntu" is an ancient African word, meaning
"humanity to others". Ubuntu also means "I am what I am because of who
we all are".<br>
<br>
</i>You are not showing humanity to others (namely David, Christians,
and Americans or anyone not from your culture), nor are you accepting
of 'who we all are' (those previously listed things), nor are you
following the standard which you so mightly say you subscribe to : the
Ubuntu Code of Conduct. <br>
<br>
Let me just help everyone out by copying and pasting certain parts of
the Code of Conduct, in hopes that tempers will subside and we will all
become level headed again.<br>
<br>
<small>"This Code of Conduct covers your behaviour as a member of the
Ubuntu
Community, in any forum, <u><i><b>mailing list</b></i></u>, wiki, web
site, IRC channel,
install-fest, public meeting or <u><i><b>private correspondence</b></i></u>.
The Ubuntu
Community Council will arbitrate in any dispute over the conduct of a
member of the community.<br>
<br>
<b>Be considerate</b>. Your work will be used by other people, and you
in turn will depend on the work of others.<br>
<br>
<b>Be respectful</b>. The Ubuntu community and its members<i> treat one
another with respect</i>. Everyone can make a valuable contribution to
Ubuntu. <u><i>We may not always agree</i></u>, <u><i>but disagreement
it no excuse for <b>poor
behaviour and poor manners</b></i></u>. We might all experience some
frustration
now and then, but we cannot allow that frustration to turn into a
<i>personal attack</i>. It's important to remember that a community
where
people feel uncomfortable or threatened is not a productive one. We
expect members of the Ubuntu community to be respectful when dealing
with other contributors as well as with people outside the Ubuntu
project, and with users of Ubuntu.<br>
<br>
<b>When you disagree, consult others</b>. Disagreements, both political
and technical, happen all the time and the Ubuntu community is no
exception. The important goal is not to avoid disagreements or
differing views but to <u><i>resolve them constructively</i></u>."<br>
<br>
And from the mailing list portion:<br>
"<i>2. Please avoid flamewars, trolling,<b> personal attacks</b>, and
repetitive
arguments.</i></small><br>
<br>
Now, specific responses to Mr. Oluwa:<br>
<small><i>"Your effort to silence me is a reflection of your grasp of
what it means to be "in Christ"."<br>
</i><big>This is a personal attack. Who says he is trying to silence
you? I read it as trying to constructively come to resolution of the
problem of merchandise production and shipping. And on top of that, you
mock Christians worldwide. You are aware this is a worldwide
distribution with worldwide users, correct? It baffles the mind why you
would do this.<br>
<br>
</big></small>"<small><i>I received many messages in support of my
objection - some of them from
UbuntuLinux high-command, so it is for you to migrate or remain using a
distribution that was created from African sweat and monetary
resources, where users will oppose right-wing promulgation in undying
defence of the African struggle for humanitarian justice. "<br>
</i><big>This is the classic "I have more friends" motto. Good for you
that you had many messages in support. Perhaps David has the same
thing? Perhaps many users, especially of those you alienated with your
earlier comments, have sent him messages of support? <br>
<br>
I would also like to challenge the 'African sweat' comment. Yes,
African work went into this distribution. As did the 'sweat' of many
other peoples around the world. This is NOT an African only
distribution. If it were, you'd have to remove all of the current
maintainers and developers and docteam members that are not from
Africa. If you'd like to do this, I grant you free will. Good luck with
your African-only distribution. However, that is not Ubuntu.</big><br>
<i><br>
"Maybe you should research the Ubuntu Community Code of Conduct and the
history and philosophy of Mark Shuttleworth and then make a public
apology.</i></small>"<br>
If you've read this far, you've seen pieces of the Community Code of
Conduct that you yourself are violating. Who are you to demand
apologies? <br>
<br>
While it would be great if the peoples of South Africa could benefit
from production of Ubuntu merchandise, shipping boxes of t-shirts from
South Africa to the US (where, unfortunately for Mr. Oluwa, a good many
users currently reside and is one of the countries where the amount of
growth for Ubuntu could skyrocket due to the number of computers per
household) is simply a poor idea and would be costly. Someone earlier
mentioned having a producer on each continent to help keep costs down
-- this is a great idea! I am saddened to see such hatred toward
Americans and Christians coming from one user. This reeks of self-pride
and is definitely, <i>in my opinion only</i>, not in the spirit of
Ubuntu.<br>
<br>
So please, let's all remember: "<i>I am what I am because of who we all
are."</i> Not, "<i>I am what I am because I am African and all
non-Africans are capitalist pigs."</i><br>
<br>
Thank you for reading,<br>
--Kevin<br>
<br>
Shango Oluwa wrote:
<blockquote cite="mid1100809989.5094.147.camel@localhost.localdomain"
type="cite">
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<meta name="GENERATOR" content="GtkHTML/3.2.3">
David Williamson,<br>
<br>
I will address you one more time to say this:<br>
<br>
_You_ seem to be the one who is offended and I cannot apologise for
that. It may be that the developers of UbuntuLinux made a "mistake" (as
you maintain) to incorporate the African notion of 'ubuntu' in this
distribution of GNU/Linux, but in fact it would seem that it is _you_
who made the mistake by subscribing to a distribution that incorporates
this philosophy in its terms of use.<br>
<br>
As long as an explicit link exists between my culture and a public
operating system, I will be advancing its cause according to my
cultural values. You correctly identify this as "politics on your
desktop" and this is your fault not mine or any proponent of African
cultural values - be it Desmond Tutu, Nelson Mandela or El Hajj Malik
Shabazz. Your effort to silence me is a reflection of your grasp of
what it means to be "in Christ".<br>
<br>
I received many messages in support of my objection - some of them from
UbuntuLinux high-command, so it is for you to migrate or remain using a
distribution that was created from African sweat and monetary
resources, where users will oppose right-wing promulgation in undying
defence of the African struggle for humanitarian justice. <br>
<br>
Maybe you should research the Ubuntu Community Code of Conduct and the
history and philosophy of Mark Shuttleworth and then make a public
apology.<br>
<br>
Over and out.<br>
Shango Oluwa.<br>
<a href="http://www.mewe.org.uk">www.mewe.org.uk</a><br>
<br>
<br>
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<tt>On Thu, 2004-11-18 at 19:30 +0000, Shango Oluwa
wrote:</tt><br>
<br>
<tt><font color="#737373">> Welcome to the
increasing reality of African and Underdeveloped World</font></tt><br>
<tt><font color="#737373">> use of the internet!
What? Should I not voice my/our concerns? </font></tt><br>
<br>
<tt>By all means express your concerns, just as I
expressed mine. My gripe</tt><br>
<tt>pertains to the socio-political connotations of
the name of the linux</tt><br>
<tt>distribution, Ubuntu. Who you are and where
you're from doesn't pertain</tt><br>
<tt>to my argument. </tt><br>
<br>
<tt><font color="#737373">> Seriously, just
browse CafeExpress.com - they have a section called</font></tt><br>
<tt><font color="#737373">> "Right-wing
politics" t-shirts... easy to gloss over and chuckle about</font></tt><br>
<tt><font color="#737373">> if you're not being
done in by the right-wing everyday.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font color="#737373">> Deal with it: Me and
my people don't want it.</font></tt><br>
<br>
<tt>Then don't buy from them. And if you don't
want Ubuntu dealing with</tt><br>
<tt>them, by all means let them know as you did.
My gripe is, again, a</tt><br>
<tt>linux distribution with a socio-political
slant, rather than just a</tt><br>
<tt>gnu/linux philosophy. Right wing or left wing,
it doesn't matter. I</tt><br>
<tt>don't want politics on my desktop unless I put
them there for myself</tt><br>
<tt>only... just as I have a faint background on my
(personal) web page of</tt><br>
<tt>Orthodox crosses - it's for me alone.</tt><br>
<br>
<tt>Is it wrong for the Ubuntu gang to have this
philosophy attached to</tt><br>
<tt>their distribution? Of course not. It's
theirs and they can do</tt><br>
<tt>anything they want with it. It's just that
it's a bone of contention,</tt><br>
<tt>and gets in the way for some people. Somebody
could take Ubuntu, rename</tt><br>
<tt>it Hitler Linux, have some wacky nazi
philosophy, a swastika splash</tt><br>
<tt>screen, and some crazy people would use it for
that reason, and because</tt><br>
<tt>it's a great distro too. But is it a good
idea? Does it increase the</tt><br>
<tt>number of people who want to use that distro?
No - and I'd rather see</tt><br>
<tt>as many people using Linux as possible.</tt><br>
<br>
<tt>I think that the philosophy attached to this
distro, while admirable,</tt><br>
<tt>will only hinder its use and growth. I've read
on the list where some</tt><br>
<tt>people don't care about that, and that's fine,
but it bugs me as someone</tt><br>
<tt>who wants to see linux take over the personal
and corporate desktops.</tt><br>
<br>
<tt>I hope I've made myself clear, and please
forgive me if I've offended</tt><br>
<tt>you in any way.</tt><br>
<br>
<tt>In Christ --</tt><br>
<br>
<tt>David Williamson</tt><br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
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