* Re: [minor patch] Amend CoC
@ 2022-02-23 11:38 Blake Shaw
2022-02-24 13:05 ` Accusation of breach of CoC (Was: [minor patch] Amend CoC) Taylan Kammer
0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread
From: Blake Shaw @ 2022-02-23 11:38 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Oliver Propst; +Cc: Andy Wingo, guix-devel
Oliver Propst <oliver.propst@fripost.org> writes:
> On 2022-02-23 10:48, Andy Wingo wrote:
>> On Tue 22 Feb 2022 18:16, Taylan Kammer <taylan.kammer@gmail.com>
>> writes:
>>
>>> If anyone's annoyed by this thread, please tell, and let us move it
>>> off-list.
>> I am annoyed by it I think it should be off-list :)
> Me to :)
Me as well, and I would add that at this point, now that two women who
are active in this community have come forward with reasonable requests
to not accept the patch and politely asked us to "get back to hacking",
yet the committer has persisted, the following two CoC seem to be in breech:
* Trolling, insulting/derogatory comments, and personal or political attacks
* Public or private harassment
If you're part of a discriminated minority and express unease with the
way folks from the dominant group are discussing your identity, yet they
persist, I think that qualifies as harassment.
With that being said, let's keep the following guideline in mind:
* Showing empathy towards other community members
and get back to hacking :)
--
“In girum imus nocte et consumimur igni”
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Accusation of breach of CoC (Was: [minor patch] Amend CoC)
2022-02-23 11:38 [minor patch] Amend CoC Blake Shaw
@ 2022-02-24 13:05 ` Taylan Kammer
2022-02-24 13:21 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread
From: Taylan Kammer @ 2022-02-24 13:05 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Blake Shaw, Oliver Propst; +Cc: guix-devel
On 23.02.2022 12:38, Blake Shaw wrote:
> Oliver Propst <oliver.propst@fripost.org> writes:
>
> [...] I would add that at this point, now that two women who
> are active in this community have come forward with reasonable requests
> to not accept the patch and politely asked us to "get back to hacking",
> yet the committer has persisted, the following two CoC seem to be in breech:
>
> * Trolling, insulting/derogatory comments, and personal or political attacks
> * Public or private harassment
I suspect you haven't properly read any of my mails and jumped to conclusions
based on a quick skim, or something like that.
> If you're part of a discriminated minority and express unease with the
> way folks from the dominant group are discussing your identity, yet they
> persist, I think that qualifies as harassment.
I have not discussed anyone's identity.
> With that being said, let's keep the following guideline in mind:
>
> * Showing empathy towards other community members
This includes not spuriously accusing others of trolling and harassment.
Were you actually being serious with your accusation? I believe such
accusations are supposed to be sent privately, to guix-maintainers@gnu.org.
Spurious public accusations like this usually just heat things up, so maybe
don't do it.
--
Taylan
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: Accusation of breach of CoC (Was: [minor patch] Amend CoC)
2022-02-24 13:05 ` Accusation of breach of CoC (Was: [minor patch] Amend CoC) Taylan Kammer
@ 2022-02-24 13:21 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
2022-02-24 14:19 ` Taylan Kammer
0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread
From: Ekaitz Zarraga @ 2022-02-24 13:21 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Taylan Kammer; +Cc: guix-devel
> I suspect you haven't properly read any of my mails and jumped to conclusions
> based on a quick skim, or something like that.
Well, I've been reading them and some people told you to stop and you still
continue. People already told you were bothering them.
Even if your tone was respectful (it was, and I appreciate that) your
insistence is starting to be somewhat annoying, at least to me.
Probably that explains the accusation.
Cheers.
Ekaitz
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: Accusation of breach of CoC (Was: [minor patch] Amend CoC)
2022-02-24 13:21 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
@ 2022-02-24 14:19 ` Taylan Kammer
2022-02-25 19:42 ` An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread Christine Lemmer-Webber
0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread
From: Taylan Kammer @ 2022-02-24 14:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Ekaitz Zarraga; +Cc: guix-devel
On 24.02.2022 14:21, Ekaitz Zarraga wrote:
>
>> I suspect you haven't properly read any of my mails and jumped to conclusions
>> based on a quick skim, or something like that.
>
> Well, I've been reading them and some people told you to stop and you still
> continue. People already told you were bothering them.
I haven't posted anything after Andy and Oliver asked to take it off-list,
other than responding to Blake's accusation of course.
Before that, nobody told me to stop or that I was bothering them, unless I
missed it?
--
Taylan
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread
2022-02-24 14:19 ` Taylan Kammer
@ 2022-02-25 19:42 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
2022-02-25 23:40 ` Morgan Lemmer Webber
2022-02-26 4:03 ` Taylan Kammer
0 siblings, 2 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Christine Lemmer-Webber @ 2022-02-25 19:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Taylan Kammer; +Cc: guix-devel, Morgan Lemmer-Webber
Taylan, I respect you and your work. I don't think you realize how much
hurt you've caused here, and I want to take your contributions at good
faith. But this has continued for days and it has definitely hurt a
lot.
I just got out of a presentation that I've been in crunchmode preparing
for all week. It was a technically intense presentation with a demo
that required a lot of engineering effort to get there. I was stressed
enough. But the demo went well. Everyone was excited, including me.
I got off the call, and normally what I would feel after something ended
like that was relief. But I didn't feel relieved. I felt... tired.
And then I started crying uncontrollably for over an hour. Because the
pressure of the presentation was so great that I had to push down and
push down all the feelings I had about what was happening on this
thread, but when it was over, they overflowed.
And I don't believe, I don't want to believe, you meant to cause harm or
hurt. You have several messages recently clearly indicating that you
feel you have been accused of things. This is not an accusation. This
is an appeal to empathy.
Normally I would have left this be quiet, or send an email one-on-one,
when things reached this stage. But I tried to help this conversation
end in quiet, and it hasn't happened, and it's been days. So I'm
relaying my experiences here.
Taylan Kammer <taylan.kammer@gmail.com> writes:
> On 24.02.2022 14:21, Ekaitz Zarraga wrote:
>>
>>> I suspect you haven't properly read any of my mails and jumped to conclusions
>>> based on a quick skim, or something like that.
>>
>> Well, I've been reading them and some people told you to stop and you still
>> continue. People already told you were bothering them.
>
> I haven't posted anything after Andy and Oliver asked to take it off-list,
> other than responding to Blake's accusation of course.
>
> Before that, nobody told me to stop or that I was bothering them, unless I
> missed it?
I did...
And maybe you missed it, but I definitely did. I *definitely* did.
This was on Monday, it is now Friday. Here's what I said across my
two emails:
- I had already expressed that my very first reaction was wanting to
support broader language but NOT to have a debate about trans experiences:
> My first thought when looking at the top of this thread was,
> 'well I would be okay with adding a word if it isn't an *entry point*
> for debating trans experiences on list' but it looks like it's likely
> to be so
- And then I said that, as a person affected, I didn't feel comfortable
debating these topics on a technical mailing list:
> I'm a transwoman with intersex characteristics. I've certainly
> read a ton about sexual and gender therory, have read plenty of
> books on it and I can say without a doubt that I really just don't
> feel comfortable debating these topics on a technical mailing list.
- And then, when I saw your email where you had pulled back, I tried
to help everything close in a way that was friendly:
> Ah okay, hadn't seen this post before I replied.
>
> It seems the issue is closed then. Look forward to everyone getting
> back to hacking. :)
Shortly thereafter I stepped away from my computer and went downstairs
and went downstairs to prepare lunch. Morgan, my wife (who is also a
Guix user, btw) said, "Are you okay? You look stressed."
And I relayed what happened on this thread.
"Is *that* what's being debated on this list? I'm not a Guix
*developer*, but I am a Guix *user*. That kind of gender essentialism
makes me both really want to join the mailing list so I can weigh in
and really *not* want to have to weigh in because I don't want to have
to deal with all that. That's not the kind of community I want to
participate in."
We co-presented at the FOSDEM room together in the "Lisp but Beautiful,
Lisp for Everyone" talk. A major portion of the talk was about Guix.
Another major portion of the talk (since "who's representing feminism"
keeps coming up) was about Morgan's experiences *writing her
dissertation using a markup language which is secretly a lisp dialect*
on "Women and Wool Working in Ancient Rome". Her PhD, Masters, Major,
and Minor were all embedded in gender and sexual analysis through the
lived experiences of women, primarily cisgender, throughout history.
No matter how many books you and I have read on gender and sexuality,
I can guarantee you Morgan has read more.
Anyway if there are any other cisgender women who have presented about
Guix in a video presentation I would be pleased, but as far as I know,
she's the only one I've seen do so. Corrections extremely welcome.
Active steps to pull more women into our community, strongly encouraged.
But at the time I said, "Oh, I think it wrapped up. The person who
raised it backpedaled and I tried to be friendly in softening the
closing by saying 'cool let's all get back to hacking!' so I don't think
we have to worry about it anymore.
And then we had lunch, and I thought it was over.
Imagine my surprise went I sent what I had thought were three very
clear, but polite, signals asking to not debate over the the experiences
of transgender people on this list, one of which was a friendly
acknowledgement that it was over from the person who raised it. But the
most uncomfortable thing for me was that the reply first thanked me for
being polite about things, but used it as an *opening* for *another*
entry point about that.
Can you imagine how that feels? How that looks?
And then it continued for an entire week.
Here I'll say something I haven't said previously: I did not come out as
transgender for a long time because I was *afraid* to come out as
transgender. Maybe you know, it's a popular past-time on the internet
right now to bully prominent trans technologists into suicide as a kind
of game. Here are two examples:
https://www.destructoid.com/transgender-dolphin-emulator-developer-dead-age-23/
https://kotaku.com/the-brilliant-snes-emulator-creator-known-as-near-has-d-1847182851
I currently consider suicide by online bullying to be my highest
mortality risk factor. Having a community where I feel safe, it's not a
small thing. The Guix community has felt like one of the nicest, safest
places in FOSS.
This week it felt a lot less so. The first immediate gut drop I felt
when I thought "I hope this doesn't turn out to be a hidden entrypoint
for someone to begin debating my lived experiences" turned out to
absolutely be true, as far as I can tell. That's how it felt to me.
On that note, just earlier today, you said:
> The inclusion of 'sex' in the CoC would be to recognize the issues
> faced by female-born people. As far as I'm aware, no female-born
> person has taken part in the discussion at all, because none seem
> to exist in the community. (What a coincidence.)
Well as said previously, there's at least one. She's not on the
guix-devel list, so she's cc'ed, because I don't want anyone to think
I'm misrepresenting her. She's not on the list but she read everything
I wrote on here before I sent it. And that's one cisgender woman (with,
again, no small background in women and gender studies), who *is* a part
of this community and has even presented at a conference in a heavily
Guix-related talk, who has expressed that she wouldn't want to be taking
part or associating herself in this community if it takes a gender
essentialist turn.
At any rate, here's the thing. Taylan, I really like your work, I would
like to think that you didn't mean to bring harm or hurt like this. But
you asked for someone to point to it, and I decided to speak here
because, since this went on for a week, it must not have been known or
understood.
At any rate, the updated upstream CoC, seems great. +1 from me. As I
said, if it wasn't as an entry point for a debate of experiences, as
just talking about protecting *also* sexual characteristics, great. But
if it's an entry point for a debate, and it *has been*, about
qutestioning the lived experiences of trans folk on the internet,
consider that it already sucks being a trans person on the internet and
for the most part we just want people to be nice to us so we can do our
damn work and live in peace.
And I would like for this thread to not, ironically, fork into exactly
the same thing I am asking to end. Acknowledge maybe, and move on.
Or just move on. Thank you.
Your hacker Guix friend,
- Christine
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread
2022-02-25 19:42 ` An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread Christine Lemmer-Webber
@ 2022-02-25 23:40 ` Morgan Lemmer Webber
2022-02-26 4:03 ` Taylan Kammer
1 sibling, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Morgan Lemmer Webber @ 2022-02-25 23:40 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Christine Lemmer-Webber; +Cc: guix-devel
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 9745 bytes --]
Hello! I am Morgan Lemmer-Webber, a cis-gendered woman who is a guix user
(though not a developer). I have been an active member of the FOSS world,
am co-host of a FOSS podcast, and overall have had delightful interactions
with the guix community. As Christine said, I do also have a PhD in Art
History with a focus on the social history of women, and therefore am well
versed in feminist theory.
That being said, I have zero interest in being the tolken cis-woman in any
group of people. In fact, this type of gender-essentialist conversation
being raised by men in an attempt to speak for women (who may or may not
want to join a community) without actually consulting women (who may or may
not already be in that community) is exactly the type of interaction that
would make me take pause before joining a community.
On Fri, Feb 25, 2022 at 6:34 PM Christine Lemmer-Webber <
cwebber@dustycloud.org> wrote:
> Taylan, I respect you and your work. I don't think you realize how much
> hurt you've caused here, and I want to take your contributions at good
> faith. But this has continued for days and it has definitely hurt a
> lot.
>
> I just got out of a presentation that I've been in crunchmode preparing
> for all week. It was a technically intense presentation with a demo
> that required a lot of engineering effort to get there. I was stressed
> enough. But the demo went well. Everyone was excited, including me.
>
> I got off the call, and normally what I would feel after something ended
> like that was relief. But I didn't feel relieved. I felt... tired.
>
> And then I started crying uncontrollably for over an hour. Because the
> pressure of the presentation was so great that I had to push down and
> push down all the feelings I had about what was happening on this
> thread, but when it was over, they overflowed.
>
> And I don't believe, I don't want to believe, you meant to cause harm or
> hurt. You have several messages recently clearly indicating that you
> feel you have been accused of things. This is not an accusation. This
> is an appeal to empathy.
>
> Normally I would have left this be quiet, or send an email one-on-one,
> when things reached this stage. But I tried to help this conversation
> end in quiet, and it hasn't happened, and it's been days. So I'm
> relaying my experiences here.
>
> Taylan Kammer <taylan.kammer@gmail.com> writes:
>
> > On 24.02.2022 14:21, Ekaitz Zarraga wrote:
> >>
> >>> I suspect you haven't properly read any of my mails and jumped to
> conclusions
> >>> based on a quick skim, or something like that.
> >>
> >> Well, I've been reading them and some people told you to stop and you
> still
> >> continue. People already told you were bothering them.
> >
> > I haven't posted anything after Andy and Oliver asked to take it
> off-list,
> > other than responding to Blake's accusation of course.
> >
> > Before that, nobody told me to stop or that I was bothering them, unless
> I
> > missed it?
>
> I did...
>
> And maybe you missed it, but I definitely did. I *definitely* did.
> This was on Monday, it is now Friday. Here's what I said across my
> two emails:
>
> - I had already expressed that my very first reaction was wanting to
> support broader language but NOT to have a debate about trans
> experiences:
>
> > My first thought when looking at the top of this thread was,
> > 'well I would be okay with adding a word if it isn't an *entry point*
> > for debating trans experiences on list' but it looks like it's likely
> > to be so
>
> - And then I said that, as a person affected, I didn't feel comfortable
> debating these topics on a technical mailing list:
>
> > I'm a transwoman with intersex characteristics. I've certainly
> > read a ton about sexual and gender therory, have read plenty of
> > books on it and I can say without a doubt that I really just don't
> > feel comfortable debating these topics on a technical mailing list.
>
> - And then, when I saw your email where you had pulled back, I tried
> to help everything close in a way that was friendly:
>
> > Ah okay, hadn't seen this post before I replied.
> >
> > It seems the issue is closed then. Look forward to everyone getting
> > back to hacking. :)
>
> Shortly thereafter I stepped away from my computer and went downstairs
> and went downstairs to prepare lunch. Morgan, my wife (who is also a
> Guix user, btw) said, "Are you okay? You look stressed."
>
> And I relayed what happened on this thread.
>
> "Is *that* what's being debated on this list? I'm not a Guix
> *developer*, but I am a Guix *user*. That kind of gender essentialism
> makes me both really want to join the mailing list so I can weigh in
> and really *not* want to have to weigh in because I don't want to have
> to deal with all that. That's not the kind of community I want to
> participate in."
>
> We co-presented at the FOSDEM room together in the "Lisp but Beautiful,
> Lisp for Everyone" talk. A major portion of the talk was about Guix.
> Another major portion of the talk (since "who's representing feminism"
> keeps coming up) was about Morgan's experiences *writing her
> dissertation using a markup language which is secretly a lisp dialect*
> on "Women and Wool Working in Ancient Rome". Her PhD, Masters, Major,
> and Minor were all embedded in gender and sexual analysis through the
> lived experiences of women, primarily cisgender, throughout history.
> No matter how many books you and I have read on gender and sexuality,
> I can guarantee you Morgan has read more.
>
> Anyway if there are any other cisgender women who have presented about
> Guix in a video presentation I would be pleased, but as far as I know,
> she's the only one I've seen do so. Corrections extremely welcome.
> Active steps to pull more women into our community, strongly encouraged.
>
> But at the time I said, "Oh, I think it wrapped up. The person who
> raised it backpedaled and I tried to be friendly in softening the
> closing by saying 'cool let's all get back to hacking!' so I don't think
> we have to worry about it anymore.
>
> And then we had lunch, and I thought it was over.
>
> Imagine my surprise went I sent what I had thought were three very
> clear, but polite, signals asking to not debate over the the experiences
> of transgender people on this list, one of which was a friendly
> acknowledgement that it was over from the person who raised it. But the
> most uncomfortable thing for me was that the reply first thanked me for
> being polite about things, but used it as an *opening* for *another*
> entry point about that.
>
> Can you imagine how that feels? How that looks?
>
> And then it continued for an entire week.
>
> Here I'll say something I haven't said previously: I did not come out as
> transgender for a long time because I was *afraid* to come out as
> transgender. Maybe you know, it's a popular past-time on the internet
> right now to bully prominent trans technologists into suicide as a kind
> of game. Here are two examples:
>
>
> https://www.destructoid.com/transgender-dolphin-emulator-developer-dead-age-23/
>
> https://kotaku.com/the-brilliant-snes-emulator-creator-known-as-near-has-d-1847182851
>
> I currently consider suicide by online bullying to be my highest
> mortality risk factor. Having a community where I feel safe, it's not a
> small thing. The Guix community has felt like one of the nicest, safest
> places in FOSS.
>
> This week it felt a lot less so. The first immediate gut drop I felt
> when I thought "I hope this doesn't turn out to be a hidden entrypoint
> for someone to begin debating my lived experiences" turned out to
> absolutely be true, as far as I can tell. That's how it felt to me.
>
> On that note, just earlier today, you said:
>
> > The inclusion of 'sex' in the CoC would be to recognize the issues
> > faced by female-born people. As far as I'm aware, no female-born
> > person has taken part in the discussion at all, because none seem
> > to exist in the community. (What a coincidence.)
>
> Well as said previously, there's at least one. She's not on the
> guix-devel list, so she's cc'ed, because I don't want anyone to think
> I'm misrepresenting her. She's not on the list but she read everything
> I wrote on here before I sent it. And that's one cisgender woman (with,
> again, no small background in women and gender studies), who *is* a part
> of this community and has even presented at a conference in a heavily
> Guix-related talk, who has expressed that she wouldn't want to be taking
> part or associating herself in this community if it takes a gender
> essentialist turn.
>
> At any rate, here's the thing. Taylan, I really like your work, I would
> like to think that you didn't mean to bring harm or hurt like this. But
> you asked for someone to point to it, and I decided to speak here
> because, since this went on for a week, it must not have been known or
> understood.
>
> At any rate, the updated upstream CoC, seems great. +1 from me. As I
> said, if it wasn't as an entry point for a debate of experiences, as
> just talking about protecting *also* sexual characteristics, great. But
> if it's an entry point for a debate, and it *has been*, about
> qutestioning the lived experiences of trans folk on the internet,
> consider that it already sucks being a trans person on the internet and
> for the most part we just want people to be nice to us so we can do our
> damn work and live in peace.
>
> And I would like for this thread to not, ironically, fork into exactly
> the same thing I am asking to end. Acknowledge maybe, and move on.
> Or just move on. Thank you.
>
> Your hacker Guix friend,
> - Christine
>
[-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 11455 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread
2022-02-25 19:42 ` An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread Christine Lemmer-Webber
2022-02-25 23:40 ` Morgan Lemmer Webber
@ 2022-02-26 4:03 ` Taylan Kammer
2022-02-26 4:14 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
` (3 more replies)
1 sibling, 4 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Taylan Kammer @ 2022-02-26 4:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Christine Lemmer-Webber; +Cc: guix-devel, Morgan Lemmer-Webber
Hi Christine,
Thank you for opening up. It was definitely not apparent to me that you
had such a reaction to the thread. As we know, text doesn't convey the
nuances of human communication very well, and I had read your initial
emails as rather relaxed, or at worst mildly annoyed. Had I realized
that they were coming from such a stressful position, I would have
responded differently.
My heartfelt apologies in that regard.
For us to be able to build up better mutual understanding and empathy in
the future, perhaps it would be good for me to open up about some things
as well.
---
Frankly, I think we're more similar than anyone taking a glance at the
thread might ever think. I've had experiences with gender dysphoria as
well, and my dis-identification with male peers has certainly played an
important role in the development of my severe chronic depression.
I'm a rather reserved person when it comes to personal matters, not as
open about my feelings as you are (and good on you -- it's not doing me
much good to be the way I am in that regard), so I don't want to go into
too much detail, but let's just say I've had multiple near-death moments
throughout the years in relation to my condition, and the latest bout of
severe suicidal thoughts was just a few months ago.
The partly hostile responses (from others, not you!) I've received in
the thread have been anything but pleasant, to say the least, but have
not led to a major breakdown, perhaps thanks to the medication I'm on,
which might be why I was able to respond a few more times...
I've packaged higan for Guix, back in 2015. Near (then byuu) helped me
revitalize some of my fondest childhood memories with the emulator he's
built. After taking some interest in the program's workings, I was also
briefly active on his web forum, and had positive interactions with him.
We weren't close personally, but I had built up a *lot* of fondness and
respect for him. The news of his suicide was absolutely awful to me.
Moreover, a certain web forum that shall not be named which was behind
the bullying campaign against Near/byuu (and countless others) also has
a "profile" of sorts written up on me in one of their threads, as a
potential future bullying target or something. So far I've been spared,
but they do have my home address, and my employer's details are a web
search away.
All of which is to say, I *deeply* empathize with your position, and at
no point would I ever wish to inflict this type of pain on anyone.
I would like to sincerely reassure you that the sole purpose in sending
the patch, and subsequent messages, was to pledge for another view to be
respected on equal regard to the one that's already correctly respected.
The reason I've felt strongly about that, pressing me to reiterate the
position in the subsequent thread by Zimoun, was of course not some
twisted wish to cause hurt. Rather, it was because that perspective is
based on the experiences of countless AFAB people who have been hurt in
countless ways, just like the perspective that is currently rightfully
encoded in the CoC is based on the experiences of trans people. (I've
also found the sex-based perspective to have strong explanatory power
w.r.t. my personal problems, although I've come to see that as almost
irrelevant in the face of everything else I've learned.)
---
There's one thing I've not been able to understand. I don't know if you
wish to respond any further, but if so, please note that the following
is a completely genuine inquiry, and not meant in any confrontational
manner at all, just like the rest of this email. I think it would be
very helpful for the future if you could help me with this:
The key reason the thread / my mails have caused hurt seems to be that
they've come across as an attempt to debate transgender experiences.
What I've not been able to understand is how that happened, since I
actually tried very hard from the beginning to make it as clear as
possible that I had no such intention.
For example, I had said things like:
"I can assure you that I'm 100% fine with the CoC mentioning gender
identity and, for example, if someone were to make inflammatory
remarks towards the worldview of transgender people in this community,
I wouldn't hesitate opposing that."
And in the summary:
"I sincerely have no issue with the CoC protecting people based on
gender identity or other transgender status, and am equally
disinterested as others in having debates about that topic."
Yet something seems to have gone wrong.
There was one email, my response to Liliana, in which I've touched on
the debate itself, but that was even before your emails so I don't
think it was that...
Reading over my mails, I just don't understand why they might have been
misunderstood so badly. If you could shed some light on that, I would be
very grateful! It would certainly help me avoid mistakes in the future,
if I were to talk about these matters in a different place.
I hope this message reaches you in the empathetic way it's meant. I've
decided to sacrifice about half a night's sleep to write it, because it
was certainly important enough for that. Well, I probably wouldn't have
been able to sleep anyway. :-)
Kindly,
Taylan
On 25.02.2022 20:42, Christine Lemmer-Webber wrote:
> Taylan, I respect you and your work. I don't think you realize how much
> hurt you've caused here, and I want to take your contributions at good
> faith. But this has continued for days and it has definitely hurt a
> lot.
>
> I just got out of a presentation that I've been in crunchmode preparing
> for all week. It was a technically intense presentation with a demo
> that required a lot of engineering effort to get there. I was stressed
> enough. But the demo went well. Everyone was excited, including me.
>
> I got off the call, and normally what I would feel after something ended
> like that was relief. But I didn't feel relieved. I felt... tired.
>
> And then I started crying uncontrollably for over an hour. Because the
> pressure of the presentation was so great that I had to push down and
> push down all the feelings I had about what was happening on this
> thread, but when it was over, they overflowed.
>
> And I don't believe, I don't want to believe, you meant to cause harm or
> hurt. You have several messages recently clearly indicating that you
> feel you have been accused of things. This is not an accusation. This
> is an appeal to empathy.
>
> Normally I would have left this be quiet, or send an email one-on-one,
> when things reached this stage. But I tried to help this conversation
> end in quiet, and it hasn't happened, and it's been days. So I'm
> relaying my experiences here.
>
> Taylan Kammer <taylan.kammer@gmail.com> writes:
>
>> On 24.02.2022 14:21, Ekaitz Zarraga wrote:
>>>
>>>> I suspect you haven't properly read any of my mails and jumped to conclusions
>>>> based on a quick skim, or something like that.
>>>
>>> Well, I've been reading them and some people told you to stop and you still
>>> continue. People already told you were bothering them.
>>
>> I haven't posted anything after Andy and Oliver asked to take it off-list,
>> other than responding to Blake's accusation of course.
>>
>> Before that, nobody told me to stop or that I was bothering them, unless I
>> missed it?
>
> I did...
>
> And maybe you missed it, but I definitely did. I *definitely* did.
> This was on Monday, it is now Friday. Here's what I said across my
> two emails:
>
> - I had already expressed that my very first reaction was wanting to
> support broader language but NOT to have a debate about trans experiences:
>
> > My first thought when looking at the top of this thread was,
> > 'well I would be okay with adding a word if it isn't an *entry point*
> > for debating trans experiences on list' but it looks like it's likely
> > to be so
>
> - And then I said that, as a person affected, I didn't feel comfortable
> debating these topics on a technical mailing list:
>
> > I'm a transwoman with intersex characteristics. I've certainly
> > read a ton about sexual and gender therory, have read plenty of
> > books on it and I can say without a doubt that I really just don't
> > feel comfortable debating these topics on a technical mailing list.
>
> - And then, when I saw your email where you had pulled back, I tried
> to help everything close in a way that was friendly:
>
> > Ah okay, hadn't seen this post before I replied.
> >
> > It seems the issue is closed then. Look forward to everyone getting
> > back to hacking. :)
>
> Shortly thereafter I stepped away from my computer and went downstairs
> and went downstairs to prepare lunch. Morgan, my wife (who is also a
> Guix user, btw) said, "Are you okay? You look stressed."
>
> And I relayed what happened on this thread.
>
> "Is *that* what's being debated on this list? I'm not a Guix
> *developer*, but I am a Guix *user*. That kind of gender essentialism
> makes me both really want to join the mailing list so I can weigh in
> and really *not* want to have to weigh in because I don't want to have
> to deal with all that. That's not the kind of community I want to
> participate in."
>
> We co-presented at the FOSDEM room together in the "Lisp but Beautiful,
> Lisp for Everyone" talk. A major portion of the talk was about Guix.
> Another major portion of the talk (since "who's representing feminism"
> keeps coming up) was about Morgan's experiences *writing her
> dissertation using a markup language which is secretly a lisp dialect*
> on "Women and Wool Working in Ancient Rome". Her PhD, Masters, Major,
> and Minor were all embedded in gender and sexual analysis through the
> lived experiences of women, primarily cisgender, throughout history.
> No matter how many books you and I have read on gender and sexuality,
> I can guarantee you Morgan has read more.
>
> Anyway if there are any other cisgender women who have presented about
> Guix in a video presentation I would be pleased, but as far as I know,
> she's the only one I've seen do so. Corrections extremely welcome.
> Active steps to pull more women into our community, strongly encouraged.
>
> But at the time I said, "Oh, I think it wrapped up. The person who
> raised it backpedaled and I tried to be friendly in softening the
> closing by saying 'cool let's all get back to hacking!' so I don't think
> we have to worry about it anymore.
>
> And then we had lunch, and I thought it was over.
>
> Imagine my surprise went I sent what I had thought were three very
> clear, but polite, signals asking to not debate over the the experiences
> of transgender people on this list, one of which was a friendly
> acknowledgement that it was over from the person who raised it. But the
> most uncomfortable thing for me was that the reply first thanked me for
> being polite about things, but used it as an *opening* for *another*
> entry point about that.
>
> Can you imagine how that feels? How that looks?
>
> And then it continued for an entire week.
>
> Here I'll say something I haven't said previously: I did not come out as
> transgender for a long time because I was *afraid* to come out as
> transgender. Maybe you know, it's a popular past-time on the internet
> right now to bully prominent trans technologists into suicide as a kind
> of game. Here are two examples:
>
> https://www.destructoid.com/transgender-dolphin-emulator-developer-dead-age-23/
> https://kotaku.com/the-brilliant-snes-emulator-creator-known-as-near-has-d-1847182851
>
> I currently consider suicide by online bullying to be my highest
> mortality risk factor. Having a community where I feel safe, it's not a
> small thing. The Guix community has felt like one of the nicest, safest
> places in FOSS.
>
> This week it felt a lot less so. The first immediate gut drop I felt
> when I thought "I hope this doesn't turn out to be a hidden entrypoint
> for someone to begin debating my lived experiences" turned out to
> absolutely be true, as far as I can tell. That's how it felt to me.
>
> On that note, just earlier today, you said:
>
>> The inclusion of 'sex' in the CoC would be to recognize the issues
>> faced by female-born people. As far as I'm aware, no female-born
>> person has taken part in the discussion at all, because none seem
>> to exist in the community. (What a coincidence.)
>
> Well as said previously, there's at least one. She's not on the
> guix-devel list, so she's cc'ed, because I don't want anyone to think
> I'm misrepresenting her. She's not on the list but she read everything
> I wrote on here before I sent it. And that's one cisgender woman (with,
> again, no small background in women and gender studies), who *is* a part
> of this community and has even presented at a conference in a heavily
> Guix-related talk, who has expressed that she wouldn't want to be taking
> part or associating herself in this community if it takes a gender
> essentialist turn.
>
> At any rate, here's the thing. Taylan, I really like your work, I would
> like to think that you didn't mean to bring harm or hurt like this. But
> you asked for someone to point to it, and I decided to speak here
> because, since this went on for a week, it must not have been known or
> understood.
>
> At any rate, the updated upstream CoC, seems great. +1 from me. As I
> said, if it wasn't as an entry point for a debate of experiences, as
> just talking about protecting *also* sexual characteristics, great. But
> if it's an entry point for a debate, and it *has been*, about
> qutestioning the lived experiences of trans folk on the internet,
> consider that it already sucks being a trans person on the internet and
> for the most part we just want people to be nice to us so we can do our
> damn work and live in peace.
>
> And I would like for this thread to not, ironically, fork into exactly
> the same thing I am asking to end. Acknowledge maybe, and move on.
> Or just move on. Thank you.
>
> Your hacker Guix friend,
> - Christine
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread
2022-02-26 4:03 ` Taylan Kammer
@ 2022-02-26 4:14 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
2022-02-26 11:35 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
` (2 subsequent siblings)
3 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Christine Lemmer-Webber @ 2022-02-26 4:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Taylan Kammer; +Cc: guix-devel, Morgan Lemmer-Webber
Taylan, thank you for the thoughtful response and to listening to what I
said. It's too close to bedtime for me to be able to respond
coherently, but I will do so tomorrow. Just wanted to leave this hear
in the meanwhile so it was clear you were heard.
- Christine
Taylan Kammer <taylan.kammer@gmail.com> writes:
> Hi Christine,
>
> Thank you for opening up. It was definitely not apparent to me that you
> had such a reaction to the thread. As we know, text doesn't convey the
> nuances of human communication very well, and I had read your initial
> emails as rather relaxed, or at worst mildly annoyed. Had I realized
> that they were coming from such a stressful position, I would have
> responded differently.
>
> My heartfelt apologies in that regard.
>
> For us to be able to build up better mutual understanding and empathy in
> the future, perhaps it would be good for me to open up about some things
> as well.
>
> ---
>
> Frankly, I think we're more similar than anyone taking a glance at the
> thread might ever think. I've had experiences with gender dysphoria as
> well, and my dis-identification with male peers has certainly played an
> important role in the development of my severe chronic depression.
>
> I'm a rather reserved person when it comes to personal matters, not as
> open about my feelings as you are (and good on you -- it's not doing me
> much good to be the way I am in that regard), so I don't want to go into
> too much detail, but let's just say I've had multiple near-death moments
> throughout the years in relation to my condition, and the latest bout of
> severe suicidal thoughts was just a few months ago.
>
> The partly hostile responses (from others, not you!) I've received in
> the thread have been anything but pleasant, to say the least, but have
> not led to a major breakdown, perhaps thanks to the medication I'm on,
> which might be why I was able to respond a few more times...
>
> I've packaged higan for Guix, back in 2015. Near (then byuu) helped me
> revitalize some of my fondest childhood memories with the emulator he's
> built. After taking some interest in the program's workings, I was also
> briefly active on his web forum, and had positive interactions with him.
> We weren't close personally, but I had built up a *lot* of fondness and
> respect for him. The news of his suicide was absolutely awful to me.
>
> Moreover, a certain web forum that shall not be named which was behind
> the bullying campaign against Near/byuu (and countless others) also has
> a "profile" of sorts written up on me in one of their threads, as a
> potential future bullying target or something. So far I've been spared,
> but they do have my home address, and my employer's details are a web
> search away.
>
> All of which is to say, I *deeply* empathize with your position, and at
> no point would I ever wish to inflict this type of pain on anyone.
>
> I would like to sincerely reassure you that the sole purpose in sending
> the patch, and subsequent messages, was to pledge for another view to be
> respected on equal regard to the one that's already correctly respected.
>
> The reason I've felt strongly about that, pressing me to reiterate the
> position in the subsequent thread by Zimoun, was of course not some
> twisted wish to cause hurt. Rather, it was because that perspective is
> based on the experiences of countless AFAB people who have been hurt in
> countless ways, just like the perspective that is currently rightfully
> encoded in the CoC is based on the experiences of trans people. (I've
> also found the sex-based perspective to have strong explanatory power
> w.r.t. my personal problems, although I've come to see that as almost
> irrelevant in the face of everything else I've learned.)
>
> ---
>
> There's one thing I've not been able to understand. I don't know if you
> wish to respond any further, but if so, please note that the following
> is a completely genuine inquiry, and not meant in any confrontational
> manner at all, just like the rest of this email. I think it would be
> very helpful for the future if you could help me with this:
>
> The key reason the thread / my mails have caused hurt seems to be that
> they've come across as an attempt to debate transgender experiences.
> What I've not been able to understand is how that happened, since I
> actually tried very hard from the beginning to make it as clear as
> possible that I had no such intention.
>
> For example, I had said things like:
>
> "I can assure you that I'm 100% fine with the CoC mentioning gender
> identity and, for example, if someone were to make inflammatory
> remarks towards the worldview of transgender people in this community,
> I wouldn't hesitate opposing that."
>
> And in the summary:
>
> "I sincerely have no issue with the CoC protecting people based on
> gender identity or other transgender status, and am equally
> disinterested as others in having debates about that topic."
>
> Yet something seems to have gone wrong.
>
> There was one email, my response to Liliana, in which I've touched on
> the debate itself, but that was even before your emails so I don't
> think it was that...
>
> Reading over my mails, I just don't understand why they might have been
> misunderstood so badly. If you could shed some light on that, I would be
> very grateful! It would certainly help me avoid mistakes in the future,
> if I were to talk about these matters in a different place.
>
>
> I hope this message reaches you in the empathetic way it's meant. I've
> decided to sacrifice about half a night's sleep to write it, because it
> was certainly important enough for that. Well, I probably wouldn't have
> been able to sleep anyway. :-)
>
> Kindly,
>
> Taylan
>
>
> On 25.02.2022 20:42, Christine Lemmer-Webber wrote:
>> Taylan, I respect you and your work. I don't think you realize how much
>> hurt you've caused here, and I want to take your contributions at good
>> faith. But this has continued for days and it has definitely hurt a
>> lot.
>>
>> I just got out of a presentation that I've been in crunchmode preparing
>> for all week. It was a technically intense presentation with a demo
>> that required a lot of engineering effort to get there. I was stressed
>> enough. But the demo went well. Everyone was excited, including me.
>>
>> I got off the call, and normally what I would feel after something ended
>> like that was relief. But I didn't feel relieved. I felt... tired.
>>
>> And then I started crying uncontrollably for over an hour. Because the
>> pressure of the presentation was so great that I had to push down and
>> push down all the feelings I had about what was happening on this
>> thread, but when it was over, they overflowed.
>>
>> And I don't believe, I don't want to believe, you meant to cause harm or
>> hurt. You have several messages recently clearly indicating that you
>> feel you have been accused of things. This is not an accusation. This
>> is an appeal to empathy.
>>
>> Normally I would have left this be quiet, or send an email one-on-one,
>> when things reached this stage. But I tried to help this conversation
>> end in quiet, and it hasn't happened, and it's been days. So I'm
>> relaying my experiences here.
>>
>> Taylan Kammer <taylan.kammer@gmail.com> writes:
>>
>>> On 24.02.2022 14:21, Ekaitz Zarraga wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> I suspect you haven't properly read any of my mails and jumped to conclusions
>>>>> based on a quick skim, or something like that.
>>>>
>>>> Well, I've been reading them and some people told you to stop and you still
>>>> continue. People already told you were bothering them.
>>>
>>> I haven't posted anything after Andy and Oliver asked to take it off-list,
>>> other than responding to Blake's accusation of course.
>>>
>>> Before that, nobody told me to stop or that I was bothering them, unless I
>>> missed it?
>>
>> I did...
>>
>> And maybe you missed it, but I definitely did. I *definitely* did.
>> This was on Monday, it is now Friday. Here's what I said across my
>> two emails:
>>
>> - I had already expressed that my very first reaction was wanting to
>> support broader language but NOT to have a debate about trans experiences:
>>
>> > My first thought when looking at the top of this thread was,
>> > 'well I would be okay with adding a word if it isn't an *entry point*
>> > for debating trans experiences on list' but it looks like it's likely
>> > to be so
>>
>> - And then I said that, as a person affected, I didn't feel comfortable
>> debating these topics on a technical mailing list:
>>
>> > I'm a transwoman with intersex characteristics. I've certainly
>> > read a ton about sexual and gender therory, have read plenty of
>> > books on it and I can say without a doubt that I really just don't
>> > feel comfortable debating these topics on a technical mailing list.
>>
>> - And then, when I saw your email where you had pulled back, I tried
>> to help everything close in a way that was friendly:
>>
>> > Ah okay, hadn't seen this post before I replied.
>> >
>> > It seems the issue is closed then. Look forward to everyone getting
>> > back to hacking. :)
>>
>> Shortly thereafter I stepped away from my computer and went downstairs
>> and went downstairs to prepare lunch. Morgan, my wife (who is also a
>> Guix user, btw) said, "Are you okay? You look stressed."
>>
>> And I relayed what happened on this thread.
>>
>> "Is *that* what's being debated on this list? I'm not a Guix
>> *developer*, but I am a Guix *user*. That kind of gender essentialism
>> makes me both really want to join the mailing list so I can weigh in
>> and really *not* want to have to weigh in because I don't want to have
>> to deal with all that. That's not the kind of community I want to
>> participate in."
>>
>> We co-presented at the FOSDEM room together in the "Lisp but Beautiful,
>> Lisp for Everyone" talk. A major portion of the talk was about Guix.
>> Another major portion of the talk (since "who's representing feminism"
>> keeps coming up) was about Morgan's experiences *writing her
>> dissertation using a markup language which is secretly a lisp dialect*
>> on "Women and Wool Working in Ancient Rome". Her PhD, Masters, Major,
>> and Minor were all embedded in gender and sexual analysis through the
>> lived experiences of women, primarily cisgender, throughout history.
>> No matter how many books you and I have read on gender and sexuality,
>> I can guarantee you Morgan has read more.
>>
>> Anyway if there are any other cisgender women who have presented about
>> Guix in a video presentation I would be pleased, but as far as I know,
>> she's the only one I've seen do so. Corrections extremely welcome.
>> Active steps to pull more women into our community, strongly encouraged.
>>
>> But at the time I said, "Oh, I think it wrapped up. The person who
>> raised it backpedaled and I tried to be friendly in softening the
>> closing by saying 'cool let's all get back to hacking!' so I don't think
>> we have to worry about it anymore.
>>
>> And then we had lunch, and I thought it was over.
>>
>> Imagine my surprise went I sent what I had thought were three very
>> clear, but polite, signals asking to not debate over the the experiences
>> of transgender people on this list, one of which was a friendly
>> acknowledgement that it was over from the person who raised it. But the
>> most uncomfortable thing for me was that the reply first thanked me for
>> being polite about things, but used it as an *opening* for *another*
>> entry point about that.
>>
>> Can you imagine how that feels? How that looks?
>>
>> And then it continued for an entire week.
>>
>> Here I'll say something I haven't said previously: I did not come out as
>> transgender for a long time because I was *afraid* to come out as
>> transgender. Maybe you know, it's a popular past-time on the internet
>> right now to bully prominent trans technologists into suicide as a kind
>> of game. Here are two examples:
>>
>> https://www.destructoid.com/transgender-dolphin-emulator-developer-dead-age-23/
>> https://kotaku.com/the-brilliant-snes-emulator-creator-known-as-near-has-d-1847182851
>>
>> I currently consider suicide by online bullying to be my highest
>> mortality risk factor. Having a community where I feel safe, it's not a
>> small thing. The Guix community has felt like one of the nicest, safest
>> places in FOSS.
>>
>> This week it felt a lot less so. The first immediate gut drop I felt
>> when I thought "I hope this doesn't turn out to be a hidden entrypoint
>> for someone to begin debating my lived experiences" turned out to
>> absolutely be true, as far as I can tell. That's how it felt to me.
>>
>> On that note, just earlier today, you said:
>>
>>> The inclusion of 'sex' in the CoC would be to recognize the issues
>>> faced by female-born people. As far as I'm aware, no female-born
>>> person has taken part in the discussion at all, because none seem
>>> to exist in the community. (What a coincidence.)
>>
>> Well as said previously, there's at least one. She's not on the
>> guix-devel list, so she's cc'ed, because I don't want anyone to think
>> I'm misrepresenting her. She's not on the list but she read everything
>> I wrote on here before I sent it. And that's one cisgender woman (with,
>> again, no small background in women and gender studies), who *is* a part
>> of this community and has even presented at a conference in a heavily
>> Guix-related talk, who has expressed that she wouldn't want to be taking
>> part or associating herself in this community if it takes a gender
>> essentialist turn.
>>
>> At any rate, here's the thing. Taylan, I really like your work, I would
>> like to think that you didn't mean to bring harm or hurt like this. But
>> you asked for someone to point to it, and I decided to speak here
>> because, since this went on for a week, it must not have been known or
>> understood.
>>
>> At any rate, the updated upstream CoC, seems great. +1 from me. As I
>> said, if it wasn't as an entry point for a debate of experiences, as
>> just talking about protecting *also* sexual characteristics, great. But
>> if it's an entry point for a debate, and it *has been*, about
>> qutestioning the lived experiences of trans folk on the internet,
>> consider that it already sucks being a trans person on the internet and
>> for the most part we just want people to be nice to us so we can do our
>> damn work and live in peace.
>>
>> And I would like for this thread to not, ironically, fork into exactly
>> the same thing I am asking to end. Acknowledge maybe, and move on.
>> Or just move on. Thank you.
>>
>> Your hacker Guix friend,
>> - Christine
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread
2022-02-26 4:03 ` Taylan Kammer
2022-02-26 4:14 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
@ 2022-02-26 11:35 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
2022-02-26 15:39 ` Morgan Lemmer Webber
2022-02-26 19:07 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
3 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Ekaitz Zarraga @ 2022-02-26 11:35 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Taylan Kammer; +Cc: guix-devel, Morgan Lemmer-Webber
I'll just add my five cents here and leave the conversation:
> Reading over my mails, I just don't understand why they might have been
> misunderstood so badly. If you could shed some light on that, I would be
> very grateful! It would certainly help me avoid mistakes in the future,
> if I were to talk about these matters in a different place.
It's what happens when you over-rationalize other people's feelings or
you talk freely about some subjects people is not comfortable with.
You didn't take a good decision, you didn't evaluate it and you are still
surprised for what it happened. Don't think, feel instead, and you'll
understand.
The problem is not the tone or the content in my opinion, but the noise,
and (in purpose or not) you made a lot of it. This thread made people
feel uncomfortable and questioned, which might be right for conversations
you have with your friends or when there's a consent from both sides, but
this is a *software* project and you forced people to see messages they
probably didn't expect or they didn't want to read.
Even with that some had the courage to tell you to stop, and here we are
still...
What I don't understand is why is people surprised. This thread was born
to blow up since the very first message (and sadly, it's not the only one
this week).
Best,
Ekaitz
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread
2022-02-26 4:03 ` Taylan Kammer
2022-02-26 4:14 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
2022-02-26 11:35 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
@ 2022-02-26 15:39 ` Morgan Lemmer Webber
2022-02-26 19:07 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
3 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Morgan Lemmer Webber @ 2022-02-26 15:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Taylan Kammer; +Cc: guix-devel
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 16963 bytes --]
Thank you for this response and for sharing some of your own experiences. I
just want to address this issue:
>The key reason the thread / my mails have caused hurt seems to be that
>they've come across as an attempt to debate transgender experiences.
>What I've not been able to understand is how that happened, since I
>actually tried very hard from the beginning to make it as clear as
>possible that I had no such intention.
I think that the main reason that this thread turned contentious is the
body of rhetoric you were referencing. In an earlier part of the thread,
you said:
>Not to hide anything: personally, I ascribe to views (broadly, radical
>feminism) which contradict some key aspects of the transgender movement.
>However, that's irrelevant in this context.
Whatever your intentions were, the rhetoric you were using to argue your
point comes from the discourse of Trans Exclusionary Radical Feminism, that
is not irrelevant in this context. You were using the same talking points
that people use to bully and harass trans people in person and online and
others in positions of power in my country and across the globe are
actively using to reject the lived experiences of transgender individuals
and deny them basic human rights (like access to health care). This is why
your proposal elicited a trauma response for some people. I will give you
the benefit of the doubt that this was not your intention but for many
people in the world and in the Guix community your argument cannot be
separated from this context.
For my own part, conversations about what benefits [cis-]women in a
community without including any [cis-]women in the conversation (though
from my persepctive as a feminist, I would argue that Liliana and
Christine's input as women should have been heeded as such) ties into a
centuries-long patriarchal trend of talking around women about their best
interests instead of speaking with them about their needs.
I hope you do not view this as an attack, I am merely framing this
conversation within broader contexts that led this thread to cause harm to
members of the community since you asked us why it had this unintended
impact.
Best,
Morgan
On Fri, Feb 25, 2022 at 11:03 PM Taylan Kammer <taylan.kammer@gmail.com>
wrote:
> Hi Christine,
>
> Thank you for opening up. It was definitely not apparent to me that you
> had such a reaction to the thread. As we know, text doesn't convey the
> nuances of human communication very well, and I had read your initial
> emails as rather relaxed, or at worst mildly annoyed. Had I realized
> that they were coming from such a stressful position, I would have
> responded differently.
>
> My heartfelt apologies in that regard.
>
> For us to be able to build up better mutual understanding and empathy in
> the future, perhaps it would be good for me to open up about some things
> as well.
>
> ---
>
> Frankly, I think we're more similar than anyone taking a glance at the
> thread might ever think. I've had experiences with gender dysphoria as
> well, and my dis-identification with male peers has certainly played an
> important role in the development of my severe chronic depression.
>
> I'm a rather reserved person when it comes to personal matters, not as
> open about my feelings as you are (and good on you -- it's not doing me
> much good to be the way I am in that regard), so I don't want to go into
> too much detail, but let's just say I've had multiple near-death moments
> throughout the years in relation to my condition, and the latest bout of
> severe suicidal thoughts was just a few months ago.
>
> The partly hostile responses (from others, not you!) I've received in
> the thread have been anything but pleasant, to say the least, but have
> not led to a major breakdown, perhaps thanks to the medication I'm on,
> which might be why I was able to respond a few more times...
>
> I've packaged higan for Guix, back in 2015. Near (then byuu) helped me
> revitalize some of my fondest childhood memories with the emulator he's
> built. After taking some interest in the program's workings, I was also
> briefly active on his web forum, and had positive interactions with him.
> We weren't close personally, but I had built up a *lot* of fondness and
> respect for him. The news of his suicide was absolutely awful to me.
>
> Moreover, a certain web forum that shall not be named which was behind
> the bullying campaign against Near/byuu (and countless others) also has
> a "profile" of sorts written up on me in one of their threads, as a
> potential future bullying target or something. So far I've been spared,
> but they do have my home address, and my employer's details are a web
> search away.
>
> All of which is to say, I *deeply* empathize with your position, and at
> no point would I ever wish to inflict this type of pain on anyone.
>
> I would like to sincerely reassure you that the sole purpose in sending
> the patch, and subsequent messages, was to pledge for another view to be
> respected on equal regard to the one that's already correctly respected.
>
> The reason I've felt strongly about that, pressing me to reiterate the
> position in the subsequent thread by Zimoun, was of course not some
> twisted wish to cause hurt. Rather, it was because that perspective is
> based on the experiences of countless AFAB people who have been hurt in
> countless ways, just like the perspective that is currently rightfully
> encoded in the CoC is based on the experiences of trans people. (I've
> also found the sex-based perspective to have strong explanatory power
> w.r.t. my personal problems, although I've come to see that as almost
> irrelevant in the face of everything else I've learned.)
>
> ---
>
> There's one thing I've not been able to understand. I don't know if you
> wish to respond any further, but if so, please note that the following
> is a completely genuine inquiry, and not meant in any confrontational
> manner at all, just like the rest of this email. I think it would be
> very helpful for the future if you could help me with this:
>
> The key reason the thread / my mails have caused hurt seems to be that
> they've come across as an attempt to debate transgender experiences.
> What I've not been able to understand is how that happened, since I
> actually tried very hard from the beginning to make it as clear as
> possible that I had no such intention.
>
> For example, I had said things like:
>
> "I can assure you that I'm 100% fine with the CoC mentioning gender
> identity and, for example, if someone were to make inflammatory
> remarks towards the worldview of transgender people in this community,
> I wouldn't hesitate opposing that."
>
> And in the summary:
>
> "I sincerely have no issue with the CoC protecting people based on
> gender identity or other transgender status, and am equally
> disinterested as others in having debates about that topic."
>
> Yet something seems to have gone wrong.
>
> There was one email, my response to Liliana, in which I've touched on
> the debate itself, but that was even before your emails so I don't
> think it was that...
>
> Reading over my mails, I just don't understand why they might have been
> misunderstood so badly. If you could shed some light on that, I would be
> very grateful! It would certainly help me avoid mistakes in the future,
> if I were to talk about these matters in a different place.
>
>
> I hope this message reaches you in the empathetic way it's meant. I've
> decided to sacrifice about half a night's sleep to write it, because it
> was certainly important enough for that. Well, I probably wouldn't have
> been able to sleep anyway. :-)
>
> Kindly,
>
> Taylan
>
>
> On 25.02.2022 20:42, Christine Lemmer-Webber wrote:
> > Taylan, I respect you and your work. I don't think you realize how much
> > hurt you've caused here, and I want to take your contributions at good
> > faith. But this has continued for days and it has definitely hurt a
> > lot.
> >
> > I just got out of a presentation that I've been in crunchmode preparing
> > for all week. It was a technically intense presentation with a demo
> > that required a lot of engineering effort to get there. I was stressed
> > enough. But the demo went well. Everyone was excited, including me.
> >
> > I got off the call, and normally what I would feel after something ended
> > like that was relief. But I didn't feel relieved. I felt... tired.
> >
> > And then I started crying uncontrollably for over an hour. Because the
> > pressure of the presentation was so great that I had to push down and
> > push down all the feelings I had about what was happening on this
> > thread, but when it was over, they overflowed.
> >
> > And I don't believe, I don't want to believe, you meant to cause harm or
> > hurt. You have several messages recently clearly indicating that you
> > feel you have been accused of things. This is not an accusation. This
> > is an appeal to empathy.
> >
> > Normally I would have left this be quiet, or send an email one-on-one,
> > when things reached this stage. But I tried to help this conversation
> > end in quiet, and it hasn't happened, and it's been days. So I'm
> > relaying my experiences here.
> >
> > Taylan Kammer <taylan.kammer@gmail.com> writes:
> >
> >> On 24.02.2022 14:21, Ekaitz Zarraga wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> I suspect you haven't properly read any of my mails and jumped to
> conclusions
> >>>> based on a quick skim, or something like that.
> >>>
> >>> Well, I've been reading them and some people told you to stop and you
> still
> >>> continue. People already told you were bothering them.
> >>
> >> I haven't posted anything after Andy and Oliver asked to take it
> off-list,
> >> other than responding to Blake's accusation of course.
> >>
> >> Before that, nobody told me to stop or that I was bothering them,
> unless I
> >> missed it?
> >
> > I did...
> >
> > And maybe you missed it, but I definitely did. I *definitely* did.
> > This was on Monday, it is now Friday. Here's what I said across my
> > two emails:
> >
> > - I had already expressed that my very first reaction was wanting to
> > support broader language but NOT to have a debate about trans
> experiences:
> >
> > > My first thought when looking at the top of this thread was,
> > > 'well I would be okay with adding a word if it isn't an *entry
> point*
> > > for debating trans experiences on list' but it looks like it's
> likely
> > > to be so
> >
> > - And then I said that, as a person affected, I didn't feel comfortable
> > debating these topics on a technical mailing list:
> >
> > > I'm a transwoman with intersex characteristics. I've certainly
> > > read a ton about sexual and gender therory, have read plenty of
> > > books on it and I can say without a doubt that I really just don't
> > > feel comfortable debating these topics on a technical mailing list.
> >
> > - And then, when I saw your email where you had pulled back, I tried
> > to help everything close in a way that was friendly:
> >
> > > Ah okay, hadn't seen this post before I replied.
> > >
> > > It seems the issue is closed then. Look forward to everyone getting
> > > back to hacking. :)
> >
> > Shortly thereafter I stepped away from my computer and went downstairs
> > and went downstairs to prepare lunch. Morgan, my wife (who is also a
> > Guix user, btw) said, "Are you okay? You look stressed."
> >
> > And I relayed what happened on this thread.
> >
> > "Is *that* what's being debated on this list? I'm not a Guix
> > *developer*, but I am a Guix *user*. That kind of gender essentialism
> > makes me both really want to join the mailing list so I can weigh in
> > and really *not* want to have to weigh in because I don't want to have
> > to deal with all that. That's not the kind of community I want to
> > participate in."
> >
> > We co-presented at the FOSDEM room together in the "Lisp but Beautiful,
> > Lisp for Everyone" talk. A major portion of the talk was about Guix.
> > Another major portion of the talk (since "who's representing feminism"
> > keeps coming up) was about Morgan's experiences *writing her
> > dissertation using a markup language which is secretly a lisp dialect*
> > on "Women and Wool Working in Ancient Rome". Her PhD, Masters, Major,
> > and Minor were all embedded in gender and sexual analysis through the
> > lived experiences of women, primarily cisgender, throughout history.
> > No matter how many books you and I have read on gender and sexuality,
> > I can guarantee you Morgan has read more.
> >
> > Anyway if there are any other cisgender women who have presented about
> > Guix in a video presentation I would be pleased, but as far as I know,
> > she's the only one I've seen do so. Corrections extremely welcome.
> > Active steps to pull more women into our community, strongly encouraged.
> >
> > But at the time I said, "Oh, I think it wrapped up. The person who
> > raised it backpedaled and I tried to be friendly in softening the
> > closing by saying 'cool let's all get back to hacking!' so I don't think
> > we have to worry about it anymore.
> >
> > And then we had lunch, and I thought it was over.
> >
> > Imagine my surprise went I sent what I had thought were three very
> > clear, but polite, signals asking to not debate over the the experiences
> > of transgender people on this list, one of which was a friendly
> > acknowledgement that it was over from the person who raised it. But the
> > most uncomfortable thing for me was that the reply first thanked me for
> > being polite about things, but used it as an *opening* for *another*
> > entry point about that.
> >
> > Can you imagine how that feels? How that looks?
> >
> > And then it continued for an entire week.
> >
> > Here I'll say something I haven't said previously: I did not come out as
> > transgender for a long time because I was *afraid* to come out as
> > transgender. Maybe you know, it's a popular past-time on the internet
> > right now to bully prominent trans technologists into suicide as a kind
> > of game. Here are two examples:
> >
> >
> https://www.destructoid.com/transgender-dolphin-emulator-developer-dead-age-23/
> >
> https://kotaku.com/the-brilliant-snes-emulator-creator-known-as-near-has-d-1847182851
> >
> > I currently consider suicide by online bullying to be my highest
> > mortality risk factor. Having a community where I feel safe, it's not a
> > small thing. The Guix community has felt like one of the nicest, safest
> > places in FOSS.
> >
> > This week it felt a lot less so. The first immediate gut drop I felt
> > when I thought "I hope this doesn't turn out to be a hidden entrypoint
> > for someone to begin debating my lived experiences" turned out to
> > absolutely be true, as far as I can tell. That's how it felt to me.
> >
> > On that note, just earlier today, you said:
> >
> >> The inclusion of 'sex' in the CoC would be to recognize the issues
> >> faced by female-born people. As far as I'm aware, no female-born
> >> person has taken part in the discussion at all, because none seem
> >> to exist in the community. (What a coincidence.)
> >
> > Well as said previously, there's at least one. She's not on the
> > guix-devel list, so she's cc'ed, because I don't want anyone to think
> > I'm misrepresenting her. She's not on the list but she read everything
> > I wrote on here before I sent it. And that's one cisgender woman (with,
> > again, no small background in women and gender studies), who *is* a part
> > of this community and has even presented at a conference in a heavily
> > Guix-related talk, who has expressed that she wouldn't want to be taking
> > part or associating herself in this community if it takes a gender
> > essentialist turn.
> >
> > At any rate, here's the thing. Taylan, I really like your work, I would
> > like to think that you didn't mean to bring harm or hurt like this. But
> > you asked for someone to point to it, and I decided to speak here
> > because, since this went on for a week, it must not have been known or
> > understood.
> >
> > At any rate, the updated upstream CoC, seems great. +1 from me. As I
> > said, if it wasn't as an entry point for a debate of experiences, as
> > just talking about protecting *also* sexual characteristics, great. But
> > if it's an entry point for a debate, and it *has been*, about
> > qutestioning the lived experiences of trans folk on the internet,
> > consider that it already sucks being a trans person on the internet and
> > for the most part we just want people to be nice to us so we can do our
> > damn work and live in peace.
> >
> > And I would like for this thread to not, ironically, fork into exactly
> > the same thing I am asking to end. Acknowledge maybe, and move on.
> > Or just move on. Thank you.
> >
> > Your hacker Guix friend,
> > - Christine
>
>
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread
2022-02-26 4:03 ` Taylan Kammer
` (2 preceding siblings ...)
2022-02-26 15:39 ` Morgan Lemmer Webber
@ 2022-02-26 19:07 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
2022-02-28 22:24 ` Taylan Kammer
3 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread
From: Christine Lemmer-Webber @ 2022-02-26 19:07 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Taylan Kammer; +Cc: guix-devel, Morgan Lemmer-Webber
Okay. Now a longer reply. I am taking a substantial portion of my day
to do this. I think there is a lot more going on here than even appears
at the surface. So I have re-read everything that has been said so far
and am doing my best to take care in what I write here. I hope it's of
some greater help and contribution for the health and well being of this
community, which I cherish.
Taylan Kammer <taylan.kammer@gmail.com> writes:
> Hi Christine,
>
> Thank you for opening up. It was definitely not apparent to me that you
> had such a reaction to the thread. As we know, text doesn't convey the
> nuances of human communication very well, and I had read your initial
> emails as rather relaxed, or at worst mildly annoyed. Had I realized
> that they were coming from such a stressful position, I would have
> responded differently.
For whatever it's worth, at the point that I composed the email, I was
anxious.
> My heartfelt apologies in that regard.
Apology (personally) accepted. I can't speak for others of course, but
it is my hope that we as a community can find healing and understanding
and move forward. And I believe you when you say this was not your
intent.
I also appreciate you being open and thoughtful throughout the rest of
this email. Know that this, and the previous, emails were not easy for
me to write. I wrote them from a position of disclosure and
vulnerability.
But not writing them would be worse. I am glad I did write it, because
(and obviously, I won't talk about the specifics), I received replies
from some folks in private saying they felt their experiences mirrored
and it may have affected their participation in Guix, and had already
affected their feeling of safety and self-identity. Not to mention my
own felings.
> For us to be able to build up better mutual understanding and empathy in
> the future, perhaps it would be good for me to open up about some things
> as well.
Certainly not a thing requied to do, but I appreciate it.
> Frankly, I think we're more similar than anyone taking a glance at the
> thread might ever think. I've had experiences with gender dysphoria as
> well, and my dis-identification with male peers has certainly played an
> important role in the development of my severe chronic depression.
>
> I'm a rather reserved person when it comes to personal matters, not as
> open about my feelings as you are (and good on you -- it's not doing me
> much good to be the way I am in that regard), so I don't want to go into
> too much detail, but let's just say I've had multiple near-death moments
> throughout the years in relation to my condition, and the latest bout of
> severe suicidal thoughts was just a few months ago.
I'm sorry to hear it.
> The partly hostile responses (from others, not you!) I've received in
> the thread have been anything but pleasant, to say the least, but have
> not led to a major breakdown, perhaps thanks to the medication I'm on,
> which might be why I was able to respond a few more times...
I am sorry, again, to hear about your dealing with depression, or that
you have had to undergo any breakdowns at all.
As for "partly hostile responses", I'd like to respond to this more
later, at the end of this thread.
> I've packaged higan for Guix, back in 2015. Near (then byuu) helped me
> revitalize some of my fondest childhood memories with the emulator he's
> built. After taking some interest in the program's workings, I was also
> briefly active on his web forum, and had positive interactions with him.
> We weren't close personally, but I had built up a *lot* of fondness and
> respect for him. The news of his suicide was absolutely awful to me.
>
> Moreover, a certain web forum that shall not be named which was behind
> the bullying campaign against Near/byuu (and countless others) also has
> a "profile" of sorts written up on me in one of their threads, as a
> potential future bullying target or something. So far I've been spared,
> but they do have my home address, and my employer's details are a web
> search away.
>
> All of which is to say, I *deeply* empathize with your position, and at
> no point would I ever wish to inflict this type of pain on anyone.
I'm truly sorry you had to experience that. Nobody deserves that.
Though (and not to undo the previous two sentences) I will say, the
choice of "he" for Near gave me most pause in this email, given the
thread's existing context of gender consierations, and that Near
identified as nonbinary as far as I understand, and that this and their
autism were partly why they were bullied into suicide...
> I would like to sincerely reassure you that the sole purpose in sending
> the patch, and subsequent messages, was to pledge for another view to be
> respected on equal regard to the one that's already correctly respected.
>
> The reason I've felt strongly about that, pressing me to reiterate the
> position in the subsequent thread by Zimoun, was of course not some
> twisted wish to cause hurt. Rather, it was because that perspective is
> based on the experiences of countless AFAB people who have been hurt in
> countless ways, just like the perspective that is currently rightfully
> encoded in the CoC is based on the experiences of trans people. (I've
> also found the sex-based perspective to have strong explanatory power
> w.r.t. my personal problems, although I've come to see that as almost
> irrelevant in the face of everything else I've learned.)
>
> ---
>
> There's one thing I've not been able to understand. I don't know if you
> wish to respond any further, but if so, please note that the following
> is a completely genuine inquiry, and not meant in any confrontational
> manner at all, just like the rest of this email. I think it would be
> very helpful for the future if you could help me with this:
>
> The key reason the thread / my mails have caused hurt seems to be that
> they've come across as an attempt to debate transgender experiences.
> What I've not been able to understand is how that happened, since I
> actually tried very hard from the beginning to make it as clear as
> possible that I had no such intention.
>
> For example, I had said things like:
>
> "I can assure you that I'm 100% fine with the CoC mentioning gender
> identity and, for example, if someone were to make inflammatory
> remarks towards the worldview of transgender people in this community,
> I wouldn't hesitate opposing that."
>
> And in the summary:
>
> "I sincerely have no issue with the CoC protecting people based on
> gender identity or other transgender status, and am equally
> disinterested as others in having debates about that topic."
>
> Yet something seems to have gone wrong.
>
> There was one email, my response to Liliana, in which I've touched on
> the debate itself, but that was even before your emails so I don't
> think it was that...
>
> Reading over my mails, I just don't understand why they might have been
> misunderstood so badly. If you could shed some light on that, I would be
> very grateful! It would certainly help me avoid mistakes in the future,
> if I were to talk about these matters in a different place.
Thanks. I am taking you at your word: you asked me to explain, and so I
am spending most of my day writing this email. I hope that ends up
being productive. I am doing my best to fulfill your request and make
it so.
> I hope this message reaches you in the empathetic way it's meant. I've
> decided to sacrifice about half a night's sleep to write it, because it
> was certainly important enough for that. Well, I probably wouldn't have
> been able to sleep anyway. :-)
It reached me in an empathetic way. And I appreciate that. It was also
my hope, in leaving myself vulnerable in my previous message, that we
could have a discussion, find common ground, and perhaps healing.
But now I do want to express something in particular, in response to a
previous part of your email:
> The partly hostile responses (from others, not you!) I've received in
> the thread have been anything but pleasant, to say the least
There may have been multiple people who have been perceived as hostile
or partly hostile, but the only person who was explicitly reprimanded
for it by another person on list was Liliana (who was reprimanded by
multiple people). Note, this is also the only other person who has
openly identified as being affected by issues of addressing transgender
identity on list, and also the person who spent the most time explaining
the other issues.
Presumably, this is because of the point at which they said the
following (using a different quoting style to distinguish):
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
On the topic of sex characteristics, while the term is somewhat badly
chosen thanks biology being super-not-political, I do think the
addition would be significantly less problematic than simply adding
"sex". It is nowadays understood that these characteristics don't
define "sex", whatever that might be, and only the name has remained
because naming is hard. As a nice side-effect, adding it would give us
two reasons to ban Taylan; first for discriminating against trans
people based on their sex characteristics and second based on their
gender identity or expression.
[...]
I agree that the guidelines themselves don't sound bad, but given the
maintainer to audience ratio, I understand that Guix would want to go
its own way in this regard. As far as public apologies are concerned,
however, I don't think these elicit a proper amount of self-criticism
in most cases – we all know the kind of actors who will publicly
apologize only to continue with (pardon my French) shitty behaviour,
rinse and repeat.
#+END_QUOTE
One person in particular called it "beyond the pale". Was it?
It's certainly a dramatically different tact than I took. But before we
play "good trans, bad trans" (actually let's never play that), I want to
point out a few things:
- I think Liliana is a more direct speaker than I am in general. I
don't think this is bad. A lot of Liliana's messages cut straight to
the point in a way common for many hackers, whereas I spend a lot of
time buffering. But Liliana is hands down one of Guix's most
productive contributors. Her analysis tends to be sharp but almost
always strikingly insightful when I've seen it. I did a search
across my mail: in the six month interval between July of 2021 and
January of 2022, Liliana is reponsible for 2.75% of guix-patches
traffic and 2.8% of bug-guix traffic. Considering that most of her
posts are review (which we sorely need), and that many of the replies
are single email responses to multiple email patch series, those
numbers are actually probably deflated from what it should be. So
I'm saying that Liliana speaks directly is probably partly how she
manages to get so much done. I find myself consistently glad that
we have Liliana in our community. All that while being, depending on
how you slice it, visibly a minority or double minority in our group.
More expansion on this below.
- In fact, regarding Liliana's first email, I sent her a thank-you
message after sending my first message. Because I had the same
feelings the moment I saw it, but I didn't feel courageous enough to
say anything. So I was grateful for Liliana for speaking up.
- Liliana had, at this point, been writing fairly patiently for a few
days. Detailed writings explaining common trans experiences and how
this was likely to affect transfolk.
- By the time Liliana appeared to lose her patience in the above quoted
section, it had been days with these conversations happening despite
the very first things Liliana and I both raised was that we were
worried about whether or not this would be used as a vector to debate
trans experiences, and then that continued to happen. For days!
So I don't blame Liliana for losing patience, or assuming bad faith
by this point.
- I did try very hard to be thoughtful. But that takes energy and is
actually something I've received active training on, speaking in
I-narratives and de-escalating and etc. Not everyone has that
training, and it's a lot of intentional energy and work to do it.
Especially when it's an issue that affects you directly.
- Regardless, sometimes it feels like, what does being kind get you?
It sucked that, while you called my first email kind, you then
proceeded to do exactly the thing I asked not to have happen on this
list: further debate the experiences of transfolk (after saying you
didn't want to!).
I appreciate that you expressed regret for me being upset, and I made
that clear by putting myself in a vulnerable state. I'm glad it
connected, but wish I didn't have to do it. But it also didn't only
hurt me... I'm just the one who expressed myself in a vulnerable way
that connected. Liliana didn't direct attention to herself, but she did
express the ways in which these things are hurtful for people who have
experiences like hers, so it shouldn't be hard to draw the connection.
(I don't want to speak for you Liliana, but I'd be surprised if you
weren't hurt.) Not to mention that speaking up makes you a target.
And for those who didn't, suffering in silence is still suffering.
Earlier I said that I admired Liliana's productivity despite, depending
on how you cut it, being either a minority or double-minority. Here's
what I mean: being a woman on the internet sucks. Being a trans on the
internet sucks. Part of the experience of being a *trans* *woman* is
that when people don't know you're trans, they treat you shittily in one
invalidating way, and then when they do, they treat you shittily in
another invalidating way. Everywhere, but *especially* in tech.
This doesn't mean that women who are cisgender don't tend to have their
own challenges. I actually think that's quite true, and serious.
Personally, I suffered a lot by being *perceived as* masculine when I
was younger (particularly because I failed under basically every metric
of being masculine, not to meniton being teased for intersex
characteristics by those who identified them), but I benefited in
regards to my career as a tech person, in that when I was very young and
I began to express an interest in computers, the pattern matching
mechanisms around those people around me identified "yup, seems like
something that would be befitting you" in a way that likely wouldn't
have been true if I was perceived female, and I was encouraged to do so.
And when I walked into FOSS conferences, people assumed I belonged. I
didn't transition until after my career was already established. And
it's something I do acknowledge (but I also don't think it's something I
think or ask for the burden of others acknowledging in general, because
it really does trigger imposter syndrome issues even to discuss this and
can be used as a mechanism to force outing people). And I've been
taught to speak in a louder voice, and that my voice is welcome, and so
I do that. (But on the other hand, I co-host a podcast, and every time
I hear my own voice disconnected from my image, it's incredibly
dysphoric and it hurts. I know plenty of transwomen whose voices have
been lost from narratives, because they are, quite literally, afraid to
speak up.)
On the other hand, transitioning later in life sucks in other ways. I
have a long career where I've been fairly fortunate to do interesting
things, but this means my past outs me in ways that I can't cover up.
And every time someone sees a commit by my old name or an article or
video with my old appearance, I know it's encoding information that
makes it harder for them to see me as a woman. And that sucks. A lot.
But the above experience isn't true for all transwomen. I have friends
who are transwomen who transitioned at much younger ages. Most of
society didn't know. Their lived experiences match those of most
cisgender women, with the primary differnce being that they have a
secret they have to guard closely.
And that's just for *transwomen*. It's well known that the experiences
of *transmen* largely get dropped out of the larger narrative. And I'm
not one, so I can't speak for them really, only relay. But my friends
who are transmasculine, yeah they tell me it's invalidating in totally
different ways: they didn't get the benefit of society assuming them
male when growing up, and so have been held back from opportunities that
their perceived-as-male colleagues got back then. And then they enter
into a world where, if they sufficiently pass, they suddenly get these
benefits that society bestows upon men, and that's both kinda validating
and also incredibly shitty feeling, and they tell me their past for
*not* having access haunts them, especially for the many who ended up
following more traditionally feminine career paths because that's the
direction they were encouraged to go. And there are all sorts of
different ways to be invalidated, not to mention TERF/radfem (and yes,
let's get to those terms soon) narratives of pity where "aww it's so
sad, because they're not *really* men", or a weird sense of
anger/betrayal for moving to the dark side, etc.
And it *is* true that there are a lot of transwomen in tech, and
especially in FOSS, and much of this has to do with
being-perceived-as-male status at a formative time. But also, speaking
for myself and many friends I've spoken to, there's an added layer.
Let's say you're growing up, you're experiencing severe gender
dysphoria. The world is mean, the world sucks. But
computers... they're a refuge. You learn to use them, they respond to
you poking at them and entering commands, and there's all these
interesting things you can do. And you can do it quietly, by yourself,
without the computer judging you, while the world outside is harsh and
mean and full of people who are bullying you. And people on the
internet, well, many of them don't even have to know you for anything
else. You can be yourself. In a world that's killing you, it's a place
you can be alive.
So for a variety of reasons it's true that, relative to the general
population, it seems like there are more transwomen in tech than in
other fields (and even more transmen in tech than most of the
population... basically, if you're transfeminine *or* transmasculine,
for whatever reason, you're more likely to be in tech). And given the
prestige that being in computing *now* has it's no wonder there's
scrutiny about that. (Aside: given that I started to take interest in
computers around 1995 and my classmates mostly just made fun of me for
it because being interested in computers was mostly uncool then,
prestiege, in my experience, is not the primary drive. It wasn't until
being in computing was associated with *making a lot of money*, which
happened towards the end of the 90s, where that started to change.
Yeah okay, I've dated myself.)
And this can be correctly pointed to as being *partly* (but as I've
outlined above, not *entirely*) part of a common tendency (but again,
not a universal one) where many transwomen have still benefitted from
male privilege from the way they were perceived prior to transitioning.
So here's the problem. There's a kernel of truth there, and one even
worth addressing.
But if you're trans, you've seen this before. The seed that's planted
is used to grow something much more vicious.
So when I saw:
Subject: [minor patch] Amend CoC
Before I even opened it, I began wondering what kind of change it was
going to be, and if anything "minor patch" made me think it was probably
the opposite. And when I saw "sex" added, I thought "Oh, was that
missing? I thought I remembered that being there." And then I
immediately thought "I just hope this isn't an entry point or backdoor
for debating trans experiences." But my mind says, "adding another
thing doesn't seem so bad."
And then even in that own email it says:
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
This is a really tiny thing. A recent thread on the ML prompted me to
look at our CoC and I noticed it doesn't include 'sex' in the list of
things based on which one might be discriminated against, so attached
is a patch that adds that one word.
Note: The upstream Contributor Covenant wouldn't want to include it
because the author seems to have a peculiar world-view where they don't
acknowledge that humans actually have a sex. I hope the Guix maintainers
are more reasonable than that. :-)
#+END_QUOTE
and my stomach just *dropped* at that, since I know the lead developer
is a transwoman. So, that's like, a really bad sign.
I think to myself: I've seen where this goes before. I just hope it
doesn't go there. Something like, "I need to make this space safe for
people who basically don't think the trans narrative is real to feel
safe saying so."
Regardless of your intention, pretty much everything that followed
seemed to confirm that. And you asked me to explain, so here's what I
saw from there (possibly not exactly in order):
- Liliana expressed exactly the same fears I already was holding.
- In reply, you said "I really feel the need to point out that what you
seem to consider a transphobic talking point is seen as a fundamental
principle of feminism by many others, and that long predates the
contemporary transgender movement."
- You later pointed out that exactly the opposite thing was said
by Coraline, and that's true, but the bigger point was really "let's
please not open this up in a way where trans experiences are debated"
then *boy howdy* did that happen.
- You linked to the exchange where you and Coraline had the debate,
so I'll re-link it:
https://github.com/EthicalSource/contributor_covenant/pull/548#pullrequestreview-131019878
In a certain sense the "gender (sex)" felt like it was really a clear
version of what I was anxious about, that this would be being passed
off as a way to *broaden* the scope, but really would be a
*constraint*.
- Or, I thought, maybe this would be an entry point to say "well we
have to open up the space for people who want to debate whether or
not to treat trans people as the gender they're expressing to feel
safe" (or to just intentionally dismiss treating trans people
respectfully)
- And then it proceeded to feel like exactly that, with two women
trying to explain why they didn't want this to happen and some guy
talking over them telling them that they're wrong, in the name of
*feminism* no less.
In direct reply to the email where I said I was nervous about this being
an entry point for that kind of thing and asked that we not debate trans
experiences on list, I received a thanks for being kind in my reply and
then got the following whammo of a comment:
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
Not to hide anything: personally, I ascribe to views (broadly, radical
feminism) which contradict some key aspects of the transgender movement.
However, that's irrelevant in this context.
#+END_QUOTE
As Morgan pointed out, it's *hardly* irrelevant. And actually, this
lead me to look up the history. The term "radical feminism" predates
the term "trans-exclusionary radical feminism" by quite some time. In
fact the person who's the first person known to use the term "TERF" was
a ciswoman who said:
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
implicitly aligning *all* radfems with the trans-exclusionary radfem
(TERF) activists, which I resent
#+END_QUOTE
and was, in her post, defending transwomen. The article is fairly
interesting:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/nov/29/im-credited-with-having-coined-the-acronym-terf-heres-how-it-happened
Terms shift, and there thus may be some irony to the above shift, as
quoted. But the term "radical feminist"'s primary use within the last
decade plus is describe people dismissive of the experiences of
transfolk, and in your sentence was *directly* followed up with "which
contradict some key aspects of the transgender movement" so I have to
say, if this isn't what you meant, you did an extremely good job of
painting yourself as saying "btw, I'm a TERF kthx" here.
Well, you asked for me to explain things. I'm explaining it.
Now frame again, in your mind, that this is happening in the context of
two women who are transgender on list asking "please don't let this be a
TERF entry point" and then read the following thing you wrote:
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
As it stands, if a person with a classical feminist consciousness
about sex discrimination were to ask me whether the Guix community
would show respect towards her experiences and take her issues
seriously, I would not be able to reassure her.
Rather, it seems that any such woman who enters the community and is
open about her views is going to risk being vilified and lectured
about her own lived experiences. By a group of male-born people, no
less.
#+END_QUOTE
So anyway, I mean, if you really didn't mean to align this with TERF
talking points, I have to say you did a bang-up job of doing so on
accident. (The last sentence particularly stings, for reasons I hope
are obvious.) And here and elsewhere, there's been what's felt like a
weird savior complex (as Morgan addressed in her emails) that both
erased the cisgender women who have contributed or been part of Guix
(and wholeheartedly agree on one point: there haven't been enough) and
felt like it dismissed the transwomen who were speaking up as not really
being women.
I don't know what caused this, I'm trying to take it in good faith. You
mentioned experiencing gender dysphoria. I don't know your experience,
but I do know people who have experienced gender dysphoria and through
some internalized transphobia fell into the trap of spreading that stuff
around, especially if they have an enormous amount of guilt.
But I really don't know what happened. And I'm not interested in blame.
And the goal, as stated, of increasing the scope of people feeling
protected, why heck that's a really good goal. But it ended up coupled
with all this other stuff, with a group of people who already have seen
an extremely similar narrative play out in ways to write out their
experiences and *said so*, and then that narrative played out anyway.
So, it was the stuff it was coupled to that was the problem.
Anyway. I spent pretty much my whole day on this. But you asked, and
so I answered. As said, I appreciate your work. And I want to take
you in good faith.
Anyway. I don't know if this was helpful, or of any good. But let me
close with something else: I think code of conduct documents are
important, but they're not licenses, they aren't held up in a court of
law. I don't think that's the point, or the goal. They're always going
to be loose, and imperfect. The goal is to express the kind of
community someone can expect, the kind of way we hope to see behaved.
To that end, I think that Guix, historically, has been one of the
brightest stars in the sky in terms of having a nice and promising
community, but a lot of that promise has yet to be fully actualized.
Having the community be a safe space for transwomen, transmen, nonbinary
folk, cisgender women, and people of all minority groups, should be a
priority. That's active effort, and it's important.
A code of conduct document sends a signal, and it provides guidance.
But we succeed in how we act to one each other. This has been a
difficult experience, but I hope, in some ways, we can heal and be
stronger for who we become.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread
2022-02-26 19:07 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
@ 2022-02-28 22:24 ` Taylan Kammer
2022-02-28 22:52 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
` (3 more replies)
0 siblings, 4 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Taylan Kammer @ 2022-02-28 22:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Christine Lemmer-Webber; +Cc: guix-devel, Morgan Lemmer-Webber
Hi Christine & co.,
This will be my last mail on this topic. It's addressed to everyone.
Thank you for putting so much time into your response. I'm responding
late because I had too much anxiety to open my mail client, and it looks
like my gut feeling was not wrong.
I'm sad to say that I have to disagree with many aspects of your message,
and it seems we will simply have to leave it at disagreement. If I were
to start enumerating all the things that I disagree with, we would be
right back at square one, and nobody wants that.
At the same time, I must provide some reasoning as to why I'm responding
in such a way after we've both put an enormous amount of effort into
building up empathy. Of course, I will continue to have respect and
empathy for you as a person; it's just our perspectives on the matter at
hand that seem impossible to reconcile, and I will try to express why
I've come to that conclusion.
---
The way I've experienced this whole situation is as follows.
Despite my repeated attempts to focus on the principle of mutual respect
for different world-views, others seem mainly interested in trying to
explain why the world-view around sex-based discrimination is somehow
wrong and bad, and should not be respected.
At the same time, it was made very clear that, had I attempted to argue
against the notion that said view is wrong and bad, it would have been
seen as proof that I'm trying to argue for a wrong and bad view and
thereby hurt people in the community.
In essence, it comes down to "it's wrong, and it's not up for debate,
because it's wrong."
---
Let me clarify again that I understand and acknowledge that a debate on
the views themselves would be deeply hurtful. That's why I've tried so
hard to avoid that, and asked what part of my mails gave the wrongful
impression that I even had any such intention.
And frankly, I find your answer to that somewhat convoluted.
Yes, I've mentioned in passing that I agree with radfem views. That was
for the sake of transparency, as pretending to be a neutral third party
would have been manipulative.
I can see that I shouldn't have used the phrase "male-born people."
Something like "people who don't know what it's like being born with a
female body" might have been more appropriate, but I doubt that changing
that one part of that one email would have made that much a difference.
(There's also a point to be made about brevity but anyway.)
All in all, I've gotten the impression that the issue with my mails was
less that I've said something to invalidate trans experiences, and more
that I've dared to suggest that a view based on different experiences
should be respected equally.
Of course, if you look closer into said views based on other experiences,
you won't take long before finding claims that invalidate yours, but that
goes both ways. Such are conflicting philosophies. It's not different
with views on religion or politics. Such is a pluralistic society.
---
Now one might ask, why am I so "fixated" on this topic, when clearly the
view I've offered is considered hostile. If people feel *so* strongly
about those views being hurtful, why not just drop it? It's very easy
to just paint me as "this weird guy obsessed with controversial views."
Well, I've tried to explain, but now that I think about it I might not
have been clear, as I was trying to avoid debate and keep my messages
brief.
I will touch on one specific thing, to serve as an example.
Morgan introduced the term "Trans Exclusionary Radical Feminist" (TERF)
and you've used it throughout your message...
By the way, Morgan, I'm sorry for not addressing you directly earlier,
it's just that I was trying to avoid debate on the subject matter itself
and your message seemed mainly like a debate starter. Responding to
Christine, on the other hand, seemed urgently necessary.
But now I want to use the term "TERF" as a demonstration as to why I feel
so strongly about mutual respect for both views in this whole debacle,
insofar we want the Guix community to be inclusive to everyone who wants
to improve Guix.
---
I know feminists who, as part of being labeled as "TERF" and subsequent
treatment by "pro-trans" (in name only IMO) activists, have:
- Been forced out of their job (firing, or forced resignation)
- Had torrents of physical (and sexualized) threats sent their way
- Had their meetings disrupted by mobs of masked individuals
- Been straight up physically assaulted (resulting in charges)
- Had said assault be publicly celebrated on social media
- Have been followed by people shouting "I hope you get r*ped"
And more. Vancouver Rape Relief and Women's Shelter had the words "Kill
TERFs" written on the windows of a building they used, and the carcass
of a rodent nailed on the door frame. Vancouver Women's Library was met
with a group of vandals upon their opening, who wrote similar things on
their door and damaged books.
(I'm too tired for citation-collecting but feel free to ask me in private
and I'll provide you with everything. Yes, all of this has happened.)
I also know, by the way, a female free software activist who has written
for the GNU Bulletin and spoken at LibrePlanet, who's a staunch supporter
of sex-based rights and has been hounded off some communities for these
views. If she wanted to contribute to Guix, would she be welcome?
There was also a GNOME developer and lesbian rights activist who, after
dedicating herself to arguing this position in a no holds barred way (one
might say, the parallel to Liliana here), garnered so much hatred that
her death from brain cancer was celebrated in some circles. Would she
have been welcomed in the Guix community?
The types of treatment described above are, plainly, dehumanization. And
the usage of "TERF" often plays a role in it. The first step is to make
sure that the people in question (women, mostly) are painted as people
whose views are not worth respecting, and from there it escalates towards
painting them as evil aggressors, all the way towards comparisons with
fascists, which is then used, in cruel irony, as justification for using
violence against them.
And of course, when the women in question become angry and sarcastic, or
even just have a single slip of judgment regarding their choice of words,
it's immediately seen as proof that they are indeed hateful.
I've avoided talking about these phenomena up so far, because they are
likely to be met with rationalizations, deflections, and so on, and
severely inflame debate. Like I said, this is my last mail on the
subject, and I won't argue back; happy to elaborate off-list.
(I won't even read responses to the thread, respond off-list if you
want me to see it.)
So that's why I'm so "obsessed" with equal respect to the competing
views on sex and gender. It's not clear at all to me that one side is
merely defending the reality of their lived experience, and the other
side trying to invalidate them; there's a *lot* more going on.
---
I won't bring up this topic again, but my overall opinion is unchanged.
This is not an inclusive or "safe for all" community by any measure if
words like "TERF" are going to be thrown around, and merely asking for
equal respect for conflicting views is met with such resistance.
Kindly, but also disappointed,
- Taylan
On 26.02.2022 20:07, Christine Lemmer-Webber wrote:
> Okay. Now a longer reply. I am taking a substantial portion of my day
> to do this. I think there is a lot more going on here than even appears
> at the surface. So I have re-read everything that has been said so far
> and am doing my best to take care in what I write here. I hope it's of
> some greater help and contribution for the health and well being of this
> community, which I cherish.
>
> Taylan Kammer <taylan.kammer@gmail.com> writes:
>
>> Hi Christine,
>>
>> Thank you for opening up. It was definitely not apparent to me that you
>> had such a reaction to the thread. As we know, text doesn't convey the
>> nuances of human communication very well, and I had read your initial
>> emails as rather relaxed, or at worst mildly annoyed. Had I realized
>> that they were coming from such a stressful position, I would have
>> responded differently.
>
> For whatever it's worth, at the point that I composed the email, I was
> anxious.
>
>> My heartfelt apologies in that regard.
>
> Apology (personally) accepted. I can't speak for others of course, but
> it is my hope that we as a community can find healing and understanding
> and move forward. And I believe you when you say this was not your
> intent.
>
> I also appreciate you being open and thoughtful throughout the rest of
> this email. Know that this, and the previous, emails were not easy for
> me to write. I wrote them from a position of disclosure and
> vulnerability.
>
> But not writing them would be worse. I am glad I did write it, because
> (and obviously, I won't talk about the specifics), I received replies
> from some folks in private saying they felt their experiences mirrored
> and it may have affected their participation in Guix, and had already
> affected their feeling of safety and self-identity. Not to mention my
> own felings.
>
>> For us to be able to build up better mutual understanding and empathy in
>> the future, perhaps it would be good for me to open up about some things
>> as well.
>
> Certainly not a thing requied to do, but I appreciate it.
>
>> Frankly, I think we're more similar than anyone taking a glance at the
>> thread might ever think. I've had experiences with gender dysphoria as
>> well, and my dis-identification with male peers has certainly played an
>> important role in the development of my severe chronic depression.
>>
>> I'm a rather reserved person when it comes to personal matters, not as
>> open about my feelings as you are (and good on you -- it's not doing me
>> much good to be the way I am in that regard), so I don't want to go into
>> too much detail, but let's just say I've had multiple near-death moments
>> throughout the years in relation to my condition, and the latest bout of
>> severe suicidal thoughts was just a few months ago.
>
> I'm sorry to hear it.
>
>> The partly hostile responses (from others, not you!) I've received in
>> the thread have been anything but pleasant, to say the least, but have
>> not led to a major breakdown, perhaps thanks to the medication I'm on,
>> which might be why I was able to respond a few more times...
>
> I am sorry, again, to hear about your dealing with depression, or that
> you have had to undergo any breakdowns at all.
>
> As for "partly hostile responses", I'd like to respond to this more
> later, at the end of this thread.
>
>> I've packaged higan for Guix, back in 2015. Near (then byuu) helped me
>> revitalize some of my fondest childhood memories with the emulator he's
>> built. After taking some interest in the program's workings, I was also
>> briefly active on his web forum, and had positive interactions with him.
>> We weren't close personally, but I had built up a *lot* of fondness and
>> respect for him. The news of his suicide was absolutely awful to me.
>>
>> Moreover, a certain web forum that shall not be named which was behind
>> the bullying campaign against Near/byuu (and countless others) also has
>> a "profile" of sorts written up on me in one of their threads, as a
>> potential future bullying target or something. So far I've been spared,
>> but they do have my home address, and my employer's details are a web
>> search away.
>>
>> All of which is to say, I *deeply* empathize with your position, and at
>> no point would I ever wish to inflict this type of pain on anyone.
>
> I'm truly sorry you had to experience that. Nobody deserves that.
>
> Though (and not to undo the previous two sentences) I will say, the
> choice of "he" for Near gave me most pause in this email, given the
> thread's existing context of gender consierations, and that Near
> identified as nonbinary as far as I understand, and that this and their
> autism were partly why they were bullied into suicide...
>
>> I would like to sincerely reassure you that the sole purpose in sending
>> the patch, and subsequent messages, was to pledge for another view to be
>> respected on equal regard to the one that's already correctly respected.
>>
>> The reason I've felt strongly about that, pressing me to reiterate the
>> position in the subsequent thread by Zimoun, was of course not some
>> twisted wish to cause hurt. Rather, it was because that perspective is
>> based on the experiences of countless AFAB people who have been hurt in
>> countless ways, just like the perspective that is currently rightfully
>> encoded in the CoC is based on the experiences of trans people. (I've
>> also found the sex-based perspective to have strong explanatory power
>> w.r.t. my personal problems, although I've come to see that as almost
>> irrelevant in the face of everything else I've learned.)
>>
>> ---
>>
>> There's one thing I've not been able to understand. I don't know if you
>> wish to respond any further, but if so, please note that the following
>> is a completely genuine inquiry, and not meant in any confrontational
>> manner at all, just like the rest of this email. I think it would be
>> very helpful for the future if you could help me with this:
>>
>> The key reason the thread / my mails have caused hurt seems to be that
>> they've come across as an attempt to debate transgender experiences.
>> What I've not been able to understand is how that happened, since I
>> actually tried very hard from the beginning to make it as clear as
>> possible that I had no such intention.
>>
>> For example, I had said things like:
>>
>> "I can assure you that I'm 100% fine with the CoC mentioning gender
>> identity and, for example, if someone were to make inflammatory
>> remarks towards the worldview of transgender people in this community,
>> I wouldn't hesitate opposing that."
>>
>> And in the summary:
>>
>> "I sincerely have no issue with the CoC protecting people based on
>> gender identity or other transgender status, and am equally
>> disinterested as others in having debates about that topic."
>>
>> Yet something seems to have gone wrong.
>>
>> There was one email, my response to Liliana, in which I've touched on
>> the debate itself, but that was even before your emails so I don't
>> think it was that...
>>
>> Reading over my mails, I just don't understand why they might have been
>> misunderstood so badly. If you could shed some light on that, I would be
>> very grateful! It would certainly help me avoid mistakes in the future,
>> if I were to talk about these matters in a different place.
>
> Thanks. I am taking you at your word: you asked me to explain, and so I
> am spending most of my day writing this email. I hope that ends up
> being productive. I am doing my best to fulfill your request and make
> it so.
>
>> I hope this message reaches you in the empathetic way it's meant. I've
>> decided to sacrifice about half a night's sleep to write it, because it
>> was certainly important enough for that. Well, I probably wouldn't have
>> been able to sleep anyway. :-)
>
> It reached me in an empathetic way. And I appreciate that. It was also
> my hope, in leaving myself vulnerable in my previous message, that we
> could have a discussion, find common ground, and perhaps healing.
>
> But now I do want to express something in particular, in response to a
> previous part of your email:
>
>> The partly hostile responses (from others, not you!) I've received in
>> the thread have been anything but pleasant, to say the least
>
> There may have been multiple people who have been perceived as hostile
> or partly hostile, but the only person who was explicitly reprimanded
> for it by another person on list was Liliana (who was reprimanded by
> multiple people). Note, this is also the only other person who has
> openly identified as being affected by issues of addressing transgender
> identity on list, and also the person who spent the most time explaining
> the other issues.
>
> Presumably, this is because of the point at which they said the
> following (using a different quoting style to distinguish):
>
> #+BEGIN_QUOTE
> On the topic of sex characteristics, while the term is somewhat badly
> chosen thanks biology being super-not-political, I do think the
> addition would be significantly less problematic than simply adding
> "sex". It is nowadays understood that these characteristics don't
> define "sex", whatever that might be, and only the name has remained
> because naming is hard. As a nice side-effect, adding it would give us
> two reasons to ban Taylan; first for discriminating against trans
> people based on their sex characteristics and second based on their
> gender identity or expression.
>
> [...]
>
> I agree that the guidelines themselves don't sound bad, but given the
> maintainer to audience ratio, I understand that Guix would want to go
> its own way in this regard. As far as public apologies are concerned,
> however, I don't think these elicit a proper amount of self-criticism
> in most cases – we all know the kind of actors who will publicly
> apologize only to continue with (pardon my French) shitty behaviour,
> rinse and repeat.
> #+END_QUOTE
>
> One person in particular called it "beyond the pale". Was it?
>
> It's certainly a dramatically different tact than I took. But before we
> play "good trans, bad trans" (actually let's never play that), I want to
> point out a few things:
>
> - I think Liliana is a more direct speaker than I am in general. I
> don't think this is bad. A lot of Liliana's messages cut straight to
> the point in a way common for many hackers, whereas I spend a lot of
> time buffering. But Liliana is hands down one of Guix's most
> productive contributors. Her analysis tends to be sharp but almost
> always strikingly insightful when I've seen it. I did a search
> across my mail: in the six month interval between July of 2021 and
> January of 2022, Liliana is reponsible for 2.75% of guix-patches
> traffic and 2.8% of bug-guix traffic. Considering that most of her
> posts are review (which we sorely need), and that many of the replies
> are single email responses to multiple email patch series, those
> numbers are actually probably deflated from what it should be. So
> I'm saying that Liliana speaks directly is probably partly how she
> manages to get so much done. I find myself consistently glad that
> we have Liliana in our community. All that while being, depending on
> how you slice it, visibly a minority or double minority in our group.
> More expansion on this below.
>
> - In fact, regarding Liliana's first email, I sent her a thank-you
> message after sending my first message. Because I had the same
> feelings the moment I saw it, but I didn't feel courageous enough to
> say anything. So I was grateful for Liliana for speaking up.
>
> - Liliana had, at this point, been writing fairly patiently for a few
> days. Detailed writings explaining common trans experiences and how
> this was likely to affect transfolk.
>
> - By the time Liliana appeared to lose her patience in the above quoted
> section, it had been days with these conversations happening despite
> the very first things Liliana and I both raised was that we were
> worried about whether or not this would be used as a vector to debate
> trans experiences, and then that continued to happen. For days!
> So I don't blame Liliana for losing patience, or assuming bad faith
> by this point.
>
> - I did try very hard to be thoughtful. But that takes energy and is
> actually something I've received active training on, speaking in
> I-narratives and de-escalating and etc. Not everyone has that
> training, and it's a lot of intentional energy and work to do it.
> Especially when it's an issue that affects you directly.
>
> - Regardless, sometimes it feels like, what does being kind get you?
> It sucked that, while you called my first email kind, you then
> proceeded to do exactly the thing I asked not to have happen on this
> list: further debate the experiences of transfolk (after saying you
> didn't want to!).
>
> I appreciate that you expressed regret for me being upset, and I made
> that clear by putting myself in a vulnerable state. I'm glad it
> connected, but wish I didn't have to do it. But it also didn't only
> hurt me... I'm just the one who expressed myself in a vulnerable way
> that connected. Liliana didn't direct attention to herself, but she did
> express the ways in which these things are hurtful for people who have
> experiences like hers, so it shouldn't be hard to draw the connection.
> (I don't want to speak for you Liliana, but I'd be surprised if you
> weren't hurt.) Not to mention that speaking up makes you a target.
> And for those who didn't, suffering in silence is still suffering.
>
> Earlier I said that I admired Liliana's productivity despite, depending
> on how you cut it, being either a minority or double-minority. Here's
> what I mean: being a woman on the internet sucks. Being a trans on the
> internet sucks. Part of the experience of being a *trans* *woman* is
> that when people don't know you're trans, they treat you shittily in one
> invalidating way, and then when they do, they treat you shittily in
> another invalidating way. Everywhere, but *especially* in tech.
>
> This doesn't mean that women who are cisgender don't tend to have their
> own challenges. I actually think that's quite true, and serious.
> Personally, I suffered a lot by being *perceived as* masculine when I
> was younger (particularly because I failed under basically every metric
> of being masculine, not to meniton being teased for intersex
> characteristics by those who identified them), but I benefited in
> regards to my career as a tech person, in that when I was very young and
> I began to express an interest in computers, the pattern matching
> mechanisms around those people around me identified "yup, seems like
> something that would be befitting you" in a way that likely wouldn't
> have been true if I was perceived female, and I was encouraged to do so.
>
> And when I walked into FOSS conferences, people assumed I belonged. I
> didn't transition until after my career was already established. And
> it's something I do acknowledge (but I also don't think it's something I
> think or ask for the burden of others acknowledging in general, because
> it really does trigger imposter syndrome issues even to discuss this and
> can be used as a mechanism to force outing people). And I've been
> taught to speak in a louder voice, and that my voice is welcome, and so
> I do that. (But on the other hand, I co-host a podcast, and every time
> I hear my own voice disconnected from my image, it's incredibly
> dysphoric and it hurts. I know plenty of transwomen whose voices have
> been lost from narratives, because they are, quite literally, afraid to
> speak up.)
>
> On the other hand, transitioning later in life sucks in other ways. I
> have a long career where I've been fairly fortunate to do interesting
> things, but this means my past outs me in ways that I can't cover up.
> And every time someone sees a commit by my old name or an article or
> video with my old appearance, I know it's encoding information that
> makes it harder for them to see me as a woman. And that sucks. A lot.
>
> But the above experience isn't true for all transwomen. I have friends
> who are transwomen who transitioned at much younger ages. Most of
> society didn't know. Their lived experiences match those of most
> cisgender women, with the primary differnce being that they have a
> secret they have to guard closely.
>
> And that's just for *transwomen*. It's well known that the experiences
> of *transmen* largely get dropped out of the larger narrative. And I'm
> not one, so I can't speak for them really, only relay. But my friends
> who are transmasculine, yeah they tell me it's invalidating in totally
> different ways: they didn't get the benefit of society assuming them
> male when growing up, and so have been held back from opportunities that
> their perceived-as-male colleagues got back then. And then they enter
> into a world where, if they sufficiently pass, they suddenly get these
> benefits that society bestows upon men, and that's both kinda validating
> and also incredibly shitty feeling, and they tell me their past for
> *not* having access haunts them, especially for the many who ended up
> following more traditionally feminine career paths because that's the
> direction they were encouraged to go. And there are all sorts of
> different ways to be invalidated, not to mention TERF/radfem (and yes,
> let's get to those terms soon) narratives of pity where "aww it's so
> sad, because they're not *really* men", or a weird sense of
> anger/betrayal for moving to the dark side, etc.
>
> And it *is* true that there are a lot of transwomen in tech, and
> especially in FOSS, and much of this has to do with
> being-perceived-as-male status at a formative time. But also, speaking
> for myself and many friends I've spoken to, there's an added layer.
> Let's say you're growing up, you're experiencing severe gender
> dysphoria. The world is mean, the world sucks. But
> computers... they're a refuge. You learn to use them, they respond to
> you poking at them and entering commands, and there's all these
> interesting things you can do. And you can do it quietly, by yourself,
> without the computer judging you, while the world outside is harsh and
> mean and full of people who are bullying you. And people on the
> internet, well, many of them don't even have to know you for anything
> else. You can be yourself. In a world that's killing you, it's a place
> you can be alive.
>
> So for a variety of reasons it's true that, relative to the general
> population, it seems like there are more transwomen in tech than in
> other fields (and even more transmen in tech than most of the
> population... basically, if you're transfeminine *or* transmasculine,
> for whatever reason, you're more likely to be in tech). And given the
> prestige that being in computing *now* has it's no wonder there's
> scrutiny about that. (Aside: given that I started to take interest in
> computers around 1995 and my classmates mostly just made fun of me for
> it because being interested in computers was mostly uncool then,
> prestiege, in my experience, is not the primary drive. It wasn't until
> being in computing was associated with *making a lot of money*, which
> happened towards the end of the 90s, where that started to change.
> Yeah okay, I've dated myself.)
>
> And this can be correctly pointed to as being *partly* (but as I've
> outlined above, not *entirely*) part of a common tendency (but again,
> not a universal one) where many transwomen have still benefitted from
> male privilege from the way they were perceived prior to transitioning.
>
> So here's the problem. There's a kernel of truth there, and one even
> worth addressing.
>
> But if you're trans, you've seen this before. The seed that's planted
> is used to grow something much more vicious.
>
> So when I saw:
>
> Subject: [minor patch] Amend CoC
>
> Before I even opened it, I began wondering what kind of change it was
> going to be, and if anything "minor patch" made me think it was probably
> the opposite. And when I saw "sex" added, I thought "Oh, was that
> missing? I thought I remembered that being there." And then I
> immediately thought "I just hope this isn't an entry point or backdoor
> for debating trans experiences." But my mind says, "adding another
> thing doesn't seem so bad."
>
> And then even in that own email it says:
>
> #+BEGIN_QUOTE
> This is a really tiny thing. A recent thread on the ML prompted me to
> look at our CoC and I noticed it doesn't include 'sex' in the list of
> things based on which one might be discriminated against, so attached
> is a patch that adds that one word.
>
> Note: The upstream Contributor Covenant wouldn't want to include it
> because the author seems to have a peculiar world-view where they don't
> acknowledge that humans actually have a sex. I hope the Guix maintainers
> are more reasonable than that. :-)
> #+END_QUOTE
>
> and my stomach just *dropped* at that, since I know the lead developer
> is a transwoman. So, that's like, a really bad sign.
>
> I think to myself: I've seen where this goes before. I just hope it
> doesn't go there. Something like, "I need to make this space safe for
> people who basically don't think the trans narrative is real to feel
> safe saying so."
>
> Regardless of your intention, pretty much everything that followed
> seemed to confirm that. And you asked me to explain, so here's what I
> saw from there (possibly not exactly in order):
>
> - Liliana expressed exactly the same fears I already was holding.
>
> - In reply, you said "I really feel the need to point out that what you
> seem to consider a transphobic talking point is seen as a fundamental
> principle of feminism by many others, and that long predates the
> contemporary transgender movement."
>
> - You later pointed out that exactly the opposite thing was said
> by Coraline, and that's true, but the bigger point was really "let's
> please not open this up in a way where trans experiences are debated"
> then *boy howdy* did that happen.
>
> - You linked to the exchange where you and Coraline had the debate,
> so I'll re-link it:
> https://github.com/EthicalSource/contributor_covenant/pull/548#pullrequestreview-131019878
> In a certain sense the "gender (sex)" felt like it was really a clear
> version of what I was anxious about, that this would be being passed
> off as a way to *broaden* the scope, but really would be a
> *constraint*.
>
> - Or, I thought, maybe this would be an entry point to say "well we
> have to open up the space for people who want to debate whether or
> not to treat trans people as the gender they're expressing to feel
> safe" (or to just intentionally dismiss treating trans people
> respectfully)
>
> - And then it proceeded to feel like exactly that, with two women
> trying to explain why they didn't want this to happen and some guy
> talking over them telling them that they're wrong, in the name of
> *feminism* no less.
>
> In direct reply to the email where I said I was nervous about this being
> an entry point for that kind of thing and asked that we not debate trans
> experiences on list, I received a thanks for being kind in my reply and
> then got the following whammo of a comment:
>
> #+BEGIN_QUOTE
> Not to hide anything: personally, I ascribe to views (broadly, radical
> feminism) which contradict some key aspects of the transgender movement.
>
> However, that's irrelevant in this context.
> #+END_QUOTE
>
> As Morgan pointed out, it's *hardly* irrelevant. And actually, this
> lead me to look up the history. The term "radical feminism" predates
> the term "trans-exclusionary radical feminism" by quite some time. In
> fact the person who's the first person known to use the term "TERF" was
> a ciswoman who said:
>
> #+BEGIN_QUOTE
> implicitly aligning *all* radfems with the trans-exclusionary radfem
> (TERF) activists, which I resent
> #+END_QUOTE
>
> and was, in her post, defending transwomen. The article is fairly
> interesting:
>
> https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/nov/29/im-credited-with-having-coined-the-acronym-terf-heres-how-it-happened
>
> Terms shift, and there thus may be some irony to the above shift, as
> quoted. But the term "radical feminist"'s primary use within the last
> decade plus is describe people dismissive of the experiences of
> transfolk, and in your sentence was *directly* followed up with "which
> contradict some key aspects of the transgender movement" so I have to
> say, if this isn't what you meant, you did an extremely good job of
> painting yourself as saying "btw, I'm a TERF kthx" here.
>
> Well, you asked for me to explain things. I'm explaining it.
>
> Now frame again, in your mind, that this is happening in the context of
> two women who are transgender on list asking "please don't let this be a
> TERF entry point" and then read the following thing you wrote:
>
> #+BEGIN_QUOTE
> As it stands, if a person with a classical feminist consciousness
> about sex discrimination were to ask me whether the Guix community
> would show respect towards her experiences and take her issues
> seriously, I would not be able to reassure her.
>
> Rather, it seems that any such woman who enters the community and is
> open about her views is going to risk being vilified and lectured
> about her own lived experiences. By a group of male-born people, no
> less.
> #+END_QUOTE
>
> So anyway, I mean, if you really didn't mean to align this with TERF
> talking points, I have to say you did a bang-up job of doing so on
> accident. (The last sentence particularly stings, for reasons I hope
> are obvious.) And here and elsewhere, there's been what's felt like a
> weird savior complex (as Morgan addressed in her emails) that both
> erased the cisgender women who have contributed or been part of Guix
> (and wholeheartedly agree on one point: there haven't been enough) and
> felt like it dismissed the transwomen who were speaking up as not really
> being women.
>
> I don't know what caused this, I'm trying to take it in good faith. You
> mentioned experiencing gender dysphoria. I don't know your experience,
> but I do know people who have experienced gender dysphoria and through
> some internalized transphobia fell into the trap of spreading that stuff
> around, especially if they have an enormous amount of guilt.
>
> But I really don't know what happened. And I'm not interested in blame.
>
> And the goal, as stated, of increasing the scope of people feeling
> protected, why heck that's a really good goal. But it ended up coupled
> with all this other stuff, with a group of people who already have seen
> an extremely similar narrative play out in ways to write out their
> experiences and *said so*, and then that narrative played out anyway.
> So, it was the stuff it was coupled to that was the problem.
>
> Anyway. I spent pretty much my whole day on this. But you asked, and
> so I answered. As said, I appreciate your work. And I want to take
> you in good faith.
>
> Anyway. I don't know if this was helpful, or of any good. But let me
> close with something else: I think code of conduct documents are
> important, but they're not licenses, they aren't held up in a court of
> law. I don't think that's the point, or the goal. They're always going
> to be loose, and imperfect. The goal is to express the kind of
> community someone can expect, the kind of way we hope to see behaved.
>
> To that end, I think that Guix, historically, has been one of the
> brightest stars in the sky in terms of having a nice and promising
> community, but a lot of that promise has yet to be fully actualized.
> Having the community be a safe space for transwomen, transmen, nonbinary
> folk, cisgender women, and people of all minority groups, should be a
> priority. That's active effort, and it's important.
>
> A code of conduct document sends a signal, and it provides guidance.
>
> But we succeed in how we act to one each other. This has been a
> difficult experience, but I hope, in some ways, we can heal and be
> stronger for who we become.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread
2022-02-28 22:24 ` Taylan Kammer
@ 2022-02-28 22:52 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
2022-02-28 23:03 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
` (2 subsequent siblings)
3 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Ekaitz Zarraga @ 2022-02-28 22:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Taylan Kammer; +Cc: guix-devel, Morgan Lemmer-Webber
Just to keep it clear, Taylan,
You didn't in any case listen to what I actually said which
was that you are forcing us to have this debate. You don't
care if we want or we don't.
I don't want to have this discussion and you are still
pushing.
I never said you were wrong or not, just wanted you to stop.
I wanted you to stop before it was too late for everyone,
and you didn't. I guess *your* views are more important than
that.
In any case, let me tell you something. You could have been
a more intelligent person and just directly propose an update
on the CoC that follows what upstream does and you'd get
absolutely no opposition. The only reason why Zimoun's update
on the CoC had some opposition was because of the noise you
provoked before.
Instead, you decided to make noise and propose a change that
had some discussion upstream. Why? I don't know. That's
something only you can explain.
If you really wanted to change the CoC, that would be the most
intelligent and innocuous way to do it. Even the people who
argued with you said they were ok with the update!
Seriously, at this point I don't understand what you were
expecting from this conversation. You already knew it was a
convoluted topic, you knew you were going to hurt people...
You did all this *because* of that, not regardless. It's more
than obvious you wanted to make the noise. You were poking
the community to see how we responded.
It's obvious you have personal issues with the topic. But as
I already stated, this is a *software project*. This is not
a place for your personal fights or for social experiments.
The only thing that will remain is that you had the chance
to decide and you decided to make this circus.
Congratulations.
PS: I also want to congratulate Zimoun for the "best apology
of the year" prize. I'm completely amazed. The way the
apology turns to be you just blaming others... An absolute
masterpiece.
PS2: Yes, I'm upset.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread
2022-02-28 22:24 ` Taylan Kammer
2022-02-28 22:52 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
@ 2022-02-28 23:03 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
2022-03-01 0:12 ` Ludovic Courtès
2022-03-01 3:00 ` Tobias Geerinckx-Rice
3 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Christine Lemmer-Webber @ 2022-02-28 23:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Taylan Kammer; +Cc: guix-devel, Morgan Lemmer-Webber
Taylan,
You asked me to take the time to explain the hurt you caused, and I did.
I spent a whole day on it. It was not easy. In response you provided a
long justification backing up the very thing you were asked not to do,
the very thing identified as causing this much hurt.
But you've made it, beyond a doubt, abundantly clear that this is
exactly what you intended to do, at least.
I hope we never see something unfold like this on this, or any related,
mailing list again.
- Christine
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread
2022-02-28 22:24 ` Taylan Kammer
2022-02-28 22:52 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
2022-02-28 23:03 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
@ 2022-03-01 0:12 ` Ludovic Courtès
2022-03-01 2:39 ` Maxim Cournoyer
2022-03-01 3:00 ` Tobias Geerinckx-Rice
3 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread
From: Ludovic Courtès @ 2022-03-01 0:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Taylan Kammer; +Cc: guix-devel, guix-maintainers, Morgan Lemmer-Webber
Taylan,
You have been asked repeatedly to stop and yet, you just reiterated what
we know has already proven to be hurtful. That’s enough.
Some things are indeed not up for debate, and the spirit of the code of
conduct is one of them. As I return from vacation, I see that long
thread that immediately went off-topic, but more importantly evidently
turned out to be unwelcoming and hurtful.
This has no place in this project. This is the very meaning of the
pledge that the project’s code of conduct is.
Let’s keep this a place where we can hack the good hack and enjoy each
other’s company.
Ludo’.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread
2022-03-01 0:12 ` Ludovic Courtès
@ 2022-03-01 2:39 ` Maxim Cournoyer
0 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Maxim Cournoyer @ 2022-03-01 2:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Ludovic Courtès; +Cc: guix-devel, guix-maintainers, Morgan Lemmer-Webber
Hi,
Ludovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org> writes:
> Taylan,
>
> You have been asked repeatedly to stop and yet, you just reiterated what
> we know has already proven to be hurtful. That’s enough.
I agree. Let's put an end to this and related threads that don't
further our project in any positive way. The Guix maintainers will meet
tomorrow and discuss what can be done to avoid such situation in the
future.
Taylan, until our decision is made, I'd like to ask you to cease any
discussion on this topic in any of the Guix communication spaces. If
there's some change you'd like to propose to the CoC, please consult
with upstream, and do it respectfully (even if/when they refuse).
I offer my apologies to everyone for not reacting earlier.
Sincerely,
Maxim
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread
2022-02-28 22:24 ` Taylan Kammer
` (2 preceding siblings ...)
2022-03-01 0:12 ` Ludovic Courtès
@ 2022-03-01 3:00 ` Tobias Geerinckx-Rice
3 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Tobias Geerinckx-Rice @ 2022-03-01 3:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: guix-devel, Taylan Kammer
Good god, man.
You spectacularly botched your original proposal. That should have been the end of it. Instead, we all have to suffer through your inability not to have the last word. Or indeed thousand words. That's cruel & unusual collective punishment, that is.
To protect you from further poor judgment, I've revoked your posting privileges to these lists.
You're not being cancelled. The right to publish to every Guixer's inbox has always been based on whitelists of folks who could be trusted with it.
You could still post, though I suggest you give it a rest. You'll just be queued with the spammers & the trolls & occasional new user -- alas, in that order :-) -- pending approval.
Since I'll defer to a majority of maintainers for that, I don't imagine it will be swift.
Kind regards,
T G-R
Sent on the go. Excuse or enjoy my brevity.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2022-03-01 3:05 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 17+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2022-02-23 11:38 [minor patch] Amend CoC Blake Shaw
2022-02-24 13:05 ` Accusation of breach of CoC (Was: [minor patch] Amend CoC) Taylan Kammer
2022-02-24 13:21 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
2022-02-24 14:19 ` Taylan Kammer
2022-02-25 19:42 ` An appeal to empathy on actual hurt caused by this thread Christine Lemmer-Webber
2022-02-25 23:40 ` Morgan Lemmer Webber
2022-02-26 4:03 ` Taylan Kammer
2022-02-26 4:14 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
2022-02-26 11:35 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
2022-02-26 15:39 ` Morgan Lemmer Webber
2022-02-26 19:07 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
2022-02-28 22:24 ` Taylan Kammer
2022-02-28 22:52 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
2022-02-28 23:03 ` Christine Lemmer-Webber
2022-03-01 0:12 ` Ludovic Courtès
2022-03-01 2:39 ` Maxim Cournoyer
2022-03-01 3:00 ` Tobias Geerinckx-Rice
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