Skip to main content
replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
Source Link

To add to the great answers from Bart and Robusto -

People are acting as if expressing a stance on a social issue were a binary thing - that you're either "socially/politically active", or "neutral" (the state in which Stack Overflow supposedly was until now, although that is arguablearguable).

Robusto's answer is much closer to the truth:

It's equivalent to wearing a pink ribbon or a red poppy on a lapel. It doesn't even rise to the level of a bumper sticker or T-shirt.

being "politically active" is a sliding scale, and what happened to the SO logo is at the very, very beginning of that scale. It is light-years away from "promoting a specific social policy".

Plus there are very personal connections to the issue among the employees, incuding the CEO.

The point of this is that like you're expected to tolerate a pink ribbon on a colleague's shirt at work, it's reasonable to expect your tolerance for the changed logo for a couple of days no matter what your views are on the issues behind it.

There is no reason to assume that there is some secret ideological ploy to, now that precedent has been set, slowly move further and further up that scale, as some users have expressed fearing (sometimes conjuring up very dystopian imagery).

I promise that if SO starts soliciting funds for a super-leftist LGBT rights organization, or the Tea Party, or calling for one or the other presidential candidate to be elected with huge banners, I'll be writing outraged Meta posts along with you.

But any of that's rather unlikely to happen in the first place. And I think most of us, if we're honest to ourselves, know this.

To add to the great answers from Bart and Robusto -

People are acting as if expressing a stance on a social issue were a binary thing - that you're either "socially/politically active", or "neutral" (the state in which Stack Overflow supposedly was until now, although that is arguable).

Robusto's answer is much closer to the truth:

It's equivalent to wearing a pink ribbon or a red poppy on a lapel. It doesn't even rise to the level of a bumper sticker or T-shirt.

being "politically active" is a sliding scale, and what happened to the SO logo is at the very, very beginning of that scale. It is light-years away from "promoting a specific social policy".

Plus there are very personal connections to the issue among the employees, incuding the CEO.

The point of this is that like you're expected to tolerate a pink ribbon on a colleague's shirt at work, it's reasonable to expect your tolerance for the changed logo for a couple of days no matter what your views are on the issues behind it.

There is no reason to assume that there is some secret ideological ploy to, now that precedent has been set, slowly move further and further up that scale, as some users have expressed fearing (sometimes conjuring up very dystopian imagery).

I promise that if SO starts soliciting funds for a super-leftist LGBT rights organization, or the Tea Party, or calling for one or the other presidential candidate to be elected with huge banners, I'll be writing outraged Meta posts along with you.

But any of that's rather unlikely to happen in the first place. And I think most of us, if we're honest to ourselves, know this.

To add to the great answers from Bart and Robusto -

People are acting as if expressing a stance on a social issue were a binary thing - that you're either "socially/politically active", or "neutral" (the state in which Stack Overflow supposedly was until now, although that is arguable).

Robusto's answer is much closer to the truth:

It's equivalent to wearing a pink ribbon or a red poppy on a lapel. It doesn't even rise to the level of a bumper sticker or T-shirt.

being "politically active" is a sliding scale, and what happened to the SO logo is at the very, very beginning of that scale. It is light-years away from "promoting a specific social policy".

Plus there are very personal connections to the issue among the employees, incuding the CEO.

The point of this is that like you're expected to tolerate a pink ribbon on a colleague's shirt at work, it's reasonable to expect your tolerance for the changed logo for a couple of days no matter what your views are on the issues behind it.

There is no reason to assume that there is some secret ideological ploy to, now that precedent has been set, slowly move further and further up that scale, as some users have expressed fearing (sometimes conjuring up very dystopian imagery).

I promise that if SO starts soliciting funds for a super-leftist LGBT rights organization, or the Tea Party, or calling for one or the other presidential candidate to be elected with huge banners, I'll be writing outraged Meta posts along with you.

But any of that's rather unlikely to happen in the first place. And I think most of us, if we're honest to ourselves, know this.

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

To add to the great answers from BartBart and RobustoRobusto -

People are acting as if expressing a stance on a social issue were a binary thing - that you're either "socially/politically active", or "neutral" (the state in which Stack Overflow supposedly was until now, although that is arguable).

Robusto's answer is much closer to the truth:much closer to the truth:

It's equivalent to wearing a pink ribbon or a red poppy on a lapel. It doesn't even rise to the level of a bumper sticker or T-shirt.

being "politically active" is a sliding scale, and what happened to the SO logo is at the very, very beginning of that scale. It is light-years away from "promoting a specific social policy".

Plus there are very personal connections to the issue among the employees, incuding the CEO.

The point of this is that like you're expected to tolerate a pink ribbon on a colleague's shirt at work, it's reasonable to expect your tolerance for the changed logo for a couple of days no matter what your views are on the issues behind it.

There is no reason to assume that there is some secret ideological ploy to, now that precedent has been set, slowly move further and further up that scale, as some users have expressed fearing (sometimes conjuring up very dystopian imagery).

I promise that if SO starts soliciting funds for a super-leftist LGBT rights organization, or the Tea Party, or calling for one or the other presidential candidate to be elected with huge banners, I'll be writing outraged Meta posts along with you.

But any of that's rather unlikely to happen in the first place. And I think most of us, if we're honest to ourselves, know this.

To add to the great answers from Bart and Robusto -

People are acting as if expressing a stance on a social issue were a binary thing - that you're either "socially/politically active", or "neutral" (the state in which Stack Overflow supposedly was until now, although that is arguable).

Robusto's answer is much closer to the truth:

It's equivalent to wearing a pink ribbon or a red poppy on a lapel. It doesn't even rise to the level of a bumper sticker or T-shirt.

being "politically active" is a sliding scale, and what happened to the SO logo is at the very, very beginning of that scale. It is light-years away from "promoting a specific social policy".

Plus there are very personal connections to the issue among the employees, incuding the CEO.

The point of this is that like you're expected to tolerate a pink ribbon on a colleague's shirt at work, it's reasonable to expect your tolerance for the changed logo for a couple of days no matter what your views are on the issues behind it.

There is no reason to assume that there is some secret ideological ploy to, now that precedent has been set, slowly move further and further up that scale, as some users have expressed fearing (sometimes conjuring up very dystopian imagery).

I promise that if SO starts soliciting funds for a super-leftist LGBT rights organization, or the Tea Party, or calling for one or the other presidential candidate to be elected with huge banners, I'll be writing outraged Meta posts along with you.

But any of that's rather unlikely to happen in the first place. And I think most of us, if we're honest to ourselves, know this.

To add to the great answers from Bart and Robusto -

People are acting as if expressing a stance on a social issue were a binary thing - that you're either "socially/politically active", or "neutral" (the state in which Stack Overflow supposedly was until now, although that is arguable).

Robusto's answer is much closer to the truth:

It's equivalent to wearing a pink ribbon or a red poppy on a lapel. It doesn't even rise to the level of a bumper sticker or T-shirt.

being "politically active" is a sliding scale, and what happened to the SO logo is at the very, very beginning of that scale. It is light-years away from "promoting a specific social policy".

Plus there are very personal connections to the issue among the employees, incuding the CEO.

The point of this is that like you're expected to tolerate a pink ribbon on a colleague's shirt at work, it's reasonable to expect your tolerance for the changed logo for a couple of days no matter what your views are on the issues behind it.

There is no reason to assume that there is some secret ideological ploy to, now that precedent has been set, slowly move further and further up that scale, as some users have expressed fearing (sometimes conjuring up very dystopian imagery).

I promise that if SO starts soliciting funds for a super-leftist LGBT rights organization, or the Tea Party, or calling for one or the other presidential candidate to be elected with huge banners, I'll be writing outraged Meta posts along with you.

But any of that's rather unlikely to happen in the first place. And I think most of us, if we're honest to ourselves, know this.

added 288 characters in body
Source Link
Pekka
  • 448.9k
  • 45
  • 207
  • 232

To add to the great answers from Bart and Robusto -

People are acting as if expressing a stance on a social issue were a binary thing - that you're either "socially/politically active", or "neutral" (the state in which Stack Overflow supposedly was until now, although that is arguable).

Robusto's answer is much closer to the truth:

It's equivalent to wearing a pink ribbon or a red poppy on a lapel. It doesn't even rise to the level of a bumper sticker or T-shirt.

being "politically active" is a sliding scale, and what happened to the SO logo is at the very, very beginning of that scale. It is light-years away from "promoting a specific social policy".

Plus there are very personal connections to the issue among the employees, incuding the CEO.

The point of this is that like you're expected to tolerate a pink ribbon on a colleague's shirt at work, it's reasonable to expect your tolerance for the changed logo for a couple of days no matter what your views are on the issues behind it.

There is no reason to assume that there is some secret ideological ploy to now, after thenow that precedent has been set, slowly move further and further up that scale, as some users have expressed fearing (sometimes conjuring up very dystopian imagery).

I promise that if SO starts soliciting funds for a super-leftist LGBT rights organization, or the Tea Party, or calling for one or the other presidential candidate to be elected with huge banners, I'll be writing outraged Meta posts along with you.

But any of that's rather unlikely to happen in the first place. And I think most of us, if we're honest to ourselves, know this.

To add to the great answers from Bart and Robusto -

People are acting as if expressing a stance on a social issue were a binary thing - that you're either "socially/politically active", or "neutral" (the state in which Stack Overflow supposedly was until now, although that is arguable).

Robusto's answer is much closer to the truth:

It's equivalent to wearing a pink ribbon or a red poppy on a lapel. It doesn't even rise to the level of a bumper sticker or T-shirt.

being "politically active" is a sliding scale, and what happened to the SO logo is at the very, very beginning of that scale. It is light-years away from "promoting a specific social policy".

Plus there are very personal connections to the issue among the employees, incuding the CEO.

The point of this is that like you're expected to tolerate a pink ribbon on a colleague's shirt at work, it's reasonable to expect your tolerance for the changed logo for a couple of days no matter what your views.

There is no reason to assume that there is some secret ideological ploy to now, after the precedent has been set, slowly move further and further up that scale, as some users have expressed fearing (sometimes conjuring up very dystopian imagery).

I promise that if SO starts soliciting funds for a super-leftist LGBT rights organization, or the Tea Party, or calling for one or the other presidential candidate to be elected with huge banners, I'll be writing outraged Meta posts along with you.

But any of that's rather unlikely to happen in the first place. And I think most of us, if we're honest to ourselves, know this.

To add to the great answers from Bart and Robusto -

People are acting as if expressing a stance on a social issue were a binary thing - that you're either "socially/politically active", or "neutral" (the state in which Stack Overflow supposedly was until now, although that is arguable).

Robusto's answer is much closer to the truth:

It's equivalent to wearing a pink ribbon or a red poppy on a lapel. It doesn't even rise to the level of a bumper sticker or T-shirt.

being "politically active" is a sliding scale, and what happened to the SO logo is at the very, very beginning of that scale. It is light-years away from "promoting a specific social policy".

Plus there are very personal connections to the issue among the employees, incuding the CEO.

The point of this is that like you're expected to tolerate a pink ribbon on a colleague's shirt at work, it's reasonable to expect your tolerance for the changed logo for a couple of days no matter what your views are on the issues behind it.

There is no reason to assume that there is some secret ideological ploy to, now that precedent has been set, slowly move further and further up that scale, as some users have expressed fearing (sometimes conjuring up very dystopian imagery).

I promise that if SO starts soliciting funds for a super-leftist LGBT rights organization, or the Tea Party, or calling for one or the other presidential candidate to be elected with huge banners, I'll be writing outraged Meta posts along with you.

But any of that's rather unlikely to happen in the first place. And I think most of us, if we're honest to ourselves, know this.

added 288 characters in body
Source Link
Pekka
  • 448.9k
  • 45
  • 207
  • 232
Loading
added 288 characters in body
Source Link
Pekka
  • 448.9k
  • 45
  • 207
  • 232
Loading
Source Link
Pekka
  • 448.9k
  • 45
  • 207
  • 232
Loading