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On Mon, Jul 15, 2013 at 1:41 PM, Sarah Sharp sarah.a.sharp@linux.intel.com wrote:

Oh, FFS, I just called out on private email for "playing the victim card". I will repeat: this is not just about me, or other minorities. I should not have to ask for professional behavior on the mailing lists. Professional behavior should be the default.

Bullshit.

The thing is, the "victim card" is exactly about trying to enforce your particular expectations on others, and trying to do so in a very particular way. It's the old "think of the children" argument. And it's bogus. Calling things "professional" is just more of the same - trying to enforce some kind of convention on others by trying to claim that it's the only acceptable way.

[ Since you seem to want to keep this in public, I'll just cut-and-paste from my reply, so you have already seen this part of my argument, it's only slightly edited because now I'm no longer typing on my cellphone ]

The thing is, different people act and react differently. On both sides. And I think we should recognize that and also allow for that. And sometimes it means, for example, that people interact primarily with certain people that they like more - because they are a better "fit".

I think we actually do it very naturally, simply because we are human, and this is how people interact in real life too. Sometimes we do it consciously - the way we have people at various companies that act as go-betweens - but most of the time we do it just because humans are all about social interactions and we don't even think about what we do and why.

For example, you work mostly through Greg. I don't think either of you planned it that way, but it's likely because you guys work well together.

See what I'm saying? People are different. I'm not polite, and I get upset easily but generally don't hold a grudge - I have these explosive emails. And that works well for some people. And it probably doesn't work well with you.

And you know what? That's fine. Not everybody had to get along or work well with each other. But the fact that it doesn't work with you doesn't make it "wrong".

This isn't all that different from working around language issues etc by having certain people work as in-betweens on that front.

And where we differ is in thinking either side has to necessarily change. You think people need to act "nicer". While I think it's natural that people have different behavior - and different expectations. We all have issues somewhere and don't all like each other. There are certain people I refuse to work with, for example. They may be good engineers, but they just aren't people I can work with.

And hey, I don't actually think we've personally even had any problems. And I realize that you may react very strongly and get nervous about us having problems, but realistically, do you actually expect to like all the other kernel engineers?

And equally importantly, not everybody has to like you, or necessarily think they have to be liked by you. OK?

So as far as I'm concerned, the discussion is about "how to work together DESPITE people being different". Not about trying to make everybody please each other. Because I can pretty much guarantee that I'll continue cursing. To me, the discussion would be about how to work together despite these kinds of cultural differences, not about "how do we make everybody nice and sing songs sound the campfire"

Do you think you might be interested in that kind of discussion instead of the "you are abusing me" kind of discussion?

Because if you want me to "act professional", I can tell you that I'm not interested. I'm sitting in my home office wearign a bathrobe. The same way I'm not going to start wearing ties, I'm also not going to buy into the fake politeness, the lying, the office politics and backstabbing, the passive aggressiveness, and the buzzwords. Because THAT is what "acting professionally" results in: people resort to all kinds of really nasty things because they are forced to act out their normal urges in unnatural ways.

Linus


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On Fri, 12 Jul 2013 18:17:08 +0200, Ingo Molnar mingo@kernel.org wrote:

On Fri, Jul 12, 2013 at 8:47 AM, Steven Rostedt rostedt@goodmis.org wrote:

I tend to hold things off after -rc4 because you scare me more than Greg does ;-)

Have you guys seen Greg? The guy is a freakish giant. He should scare you. He might squish you without ever even noticing.

Greg might be a giant and he might squish people without ever even noticing, but that's just a grave, deadly physical threat no real kernel hacker ever feels threatened by. (Not much can hurt us deep in our dark basements after all, except maybe earthquakes, gamma ray eruptions and Mom trying to clean up around the computers.)

So Greg, if you want it all to change, create some real threat: be frank with contributors and sometimes swear a bit. That will cut your mailqueue in half, promise!

On Fri, 12 Jul 2013 08:22:27 -0700, Linus wrote:

Greg, the reason you get a lot of stable patches seems to be that you make it easy to act as a door-mat. Clearly at least some people say "I know this patch isn't important enough to send to Linus, but I know Greg will silently accept it after the fact, so I'll just wait and mark it for stable".

You may need to learn to shout at people.

Seriously, guys? Is this what we need in order to get improve -stable? Linus Torvalds is advocating for physical intimidation and violence. Ingo Molnar and Linus are advocating for verbal abuse.

Not fucking cool. Violence, whether it be physical intimidation, verbal threats or verbal abuse is not acceptable. Keep it professional on the mailing lists.

Let's discuss this at Kernel Summit where we can at least yell at each other in person. Yeah, just try yelling at me about this. I'll roar right back, louder, for all the people who lose their voice when they get yelled at by top maintainers. I won't be the nice girl anymore.

Sarah Sharp


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