| > most people won't remember this Moldbug business longer than 15 minutes People attending? Maybe they'll forget. But many of the regular speakers or sponsors from FP conferences will not. On the Scala side I know of at least the Typelevel Summit in Boulder being canceled (http://goo.gl/2HAVca) and along with sponsors like 47 degrees pulling their sponsorship for LambdaConf (http://goo.gl/h9WucI). Note that the Typelevel members are community leaders that have contributed to many projects, including Scalaz, Cats, Algebra, Shapeless, Simulacrum, Machinist, Ensime, Spire, etc. And on the Clojure side you've got people like David Nolen of ClojureScript and Om fame saying that LambdaConf is now on the list of conferences he'll never attend. People follow leaders and if you think this won't have repercussions for LambdaConf, think again. > In the post, he comes across as tolerant, albeit with a narrative outside the political mainstream. Related to this article, I'm not interested in arguing the fine nuances of his argument or the English language, but when you don't consider other people as being your equal, that's racist by definition. A fact made clear by Moldbug's writing. And the fact that there are people that jump in defense of his narrative highlights the importance of speaking and acting against such beliefs. |
I also don't mind if people don't attend his talks as a form of protest. Heck I probably wouldn't go to them myself.
But demanding somebody be cancelled from a conference because you don't agree with them on something that has nothing to do with the topics of said conference seems to set a bad precedence.
After all that might give others the right to demand people not be permitted to speak because they are communists, gay, hippies, or what else.
As for tolerant people being tricked into allowing intolerance. I'm pretty sure everybody there has a limit on intolerance that they won't tolerate anymore. I firmly believe that everybody has the absolute right for physical protection, so if he had a history of violence there would have been a clear cut line.
However, I don't think that anybody has the right to not be offended, or to be protected from "emotional harm". I expect adults to be able to control themselves enough that this shouldn't be an issue. If all he's done is being an ass, that doesn't justify him being kicked out.
Sticks and stones.