We as a community do not tolerate verbal abuse or marginalizing[0] language anymore. Grow up, live in the fucking now (and not the 90s/2000s when open source was a good ole boys' club) and adjust your attitude -- or face the consequences. It doesn't matter how long you've been in the community or how much you contribute; you are not entitled to leadership or prestige if you're a bigoted asshole.
[0] There was a great bit in the series Rules of the Game where a character says "Don't use words like 'hottie' or 'lush'; it's marginalising." The choice of "marginalising" over "offensive" is a clever one; offensive language is subjective, whereas marginalizing language objectively reinforces existing power structures designed to exclude.
> We as a community do not tolerate verbal abuse or marginalizing[0] language anymore. Grow up, live in the fucking now (and not the 90s/2000s when open source was a good ole boys' club) and adjust your attitude -- or face the consequences. It doesn't matter how long you've been in the community or how much you contribute; you are not entitled to leadership or prestige if you're a bigoted asshole.
English might not be my native language but, in my opinion, this statements contradicts itself.
Who does Linus marginalise? I can accept "someone" as an answer but I think that word has a darker connotation which is deeply unfair to ascribe to Linus given that he is rude and obnoxious sometimes but I don't think he's ever rude and obnoxious about (say) Chinese people or amputees.
[0] There was a great bit in the series Rules of the Game where a character says "Don't use words like 'hottie' or 'lush'; it's marginalising." The choice of "marginalising" over "offensive" is a clever one; offensive language is subjective, whereas marginalizing language objectively reinforces existing power structures designed to exclude.