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by qbasic_forever 1835 days ago
There are very real cultural differences and taboos against questioning and pushing back against authority. What one culture may view as normal and expected process in improvement, another is horrified and ashamed to consider. Do not assume just because you've grown up or grown accustomed to it that it's 'normal' or practiced everywhere. This is perhaps one of the biggest frictions I see in teams that are full of folks from different cultures and backgrounds.
3 comments

> There are very real cultural differences and taboos against questioning and pushing back against authority.

Hence why so many cases of "Yes, I understand. We'll do the needful." that don't go as planned...

That's my experience too. I'm Hungarian and worked or collaborated with people from a handful of nations (Japan, Korea, Tamil Nadu (India), Mumbai (India), Ukraine, Russia, Portugal, Poland, Guandong (China), Hong Kong, USA, Brazil, Nepal, Pakistan, Switzerland, France, Austria, UK, Greece, Serbia, Montenegro, South Africa, Australia, Sri Lanka, Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Netherlands, Canada), in person, just over the past ~13 years. Before that, I was only exposed to Hungarian work culture for the first 30 years of my life, so that was my base-line.

Some of the differences in attitude towards work, co-workers and authority truly triggered rage in me. Then someone suggested that the reason for these differences are cultural, hence very deeply rooted and I can't expect to change them quickly or at all. For that reason, I should be the one who adapts, since now I understand the situation and I care to solve the problem.

I kinda agree with this assessment, but if I can put this effort in to even out cultural differences, so as the other party can, just have to make them aware of this discovery and try converge multiple times, since our goal is to work together.

There is a lot more to say, but that's how far I have the time to go now :)

Where do people stay silent for so long?

[Edit: rephrased]

Did you read the original blog post? They clearly mention at the end they posted it because they were repeatedly asked why they disengaged from the Racket community:

"Why mention any of this now? Two reasons.

Over the last year, friends in the Racket commu­nity have asked me why I’ve reduced my involve­ment. Absent anything else, they assume the most obvious reason: that I’m bored or frus­trated with Racket as a language. That I’ve moved on to other things.

Not true. On the contrary, it seems impor­tant to reassert: I like almost every­thing about Racket. It’s still my favorite program­ming envi­ron­ment. I use it almost every day. I wish I could still contribute the way I did before. But I can’t subject myself to more of the same. In that sense, it feels more like exile than with­drawal.

I’ve been involved with FOSS projects for nearly 25 years. A project that depends on free contri­bu­tions of time & effort—as every FOSS project does—needs to be an appealing place for others to make gifts of their time. Sure, in any commu­nity of opin­ion­ated humans, occa­sional fric­tions and disagree­ments are natural. But Felleisen’s outra­geous hostility went far beyond anything I’d expe­ri­enced."

Also this main issue occurred three years ago. It is very odd to assume that someone decided to just sit on an issue for three years and then suddenly gotcha throw it out of nowhere.

This person was bullied out of the Racket community. They quietly left rather than try to fight against aggressive personalities. That's the real story here, and what happens in 99% of similar incidents.

Hierarchies. The answer to your question is: hierarchies.
This is a good answer, thanks.