Posted on 04/05/2014 4:49:51 PM PDT by Sub-Driver
NY Times: Mozilla CEO's 'Anti-Gay' Stance 'By Definition Disqualifying,' He Needed 'Rehabilitation' By Tim Graham Created 04/05/2014 - 6:59pm
Our web guru Steve Edwards passed along a tweet from Moe Lane that said "New York Times confirms: Open Source advocacy is for liberals/progressives only. "
Lane linked to an obnoxious blog post by Farhad Manjoo in The New York Times titled Why Mozillas Chief Had to Resign. You see, Mozilla is not a normal company. It is an activist organization. And activists apparently find it very distasteful to be less than militantly tolerant, as Manjoo put it:
Is this an instance of political correctness run amok? Is it a sign that Silicon Valley has become militantly tolerant, unwilling to let executives express their personal viewpoints on issues unrelated to their jobs? Ive seen many such worries expressed online; even supporters of same-sex marriage have been characterizing Mr. Eichs ouster as an awful precedent for giving in to moralistic mob rule.
But its a mistake to draw any such conclusions in this case, for one simple reason: Mozilla is not a normal company. It is an activist organization. Mozillas primary mission isnt to make money but to spread open-source code across the globe in the eventual hope of promoting the development of the Internet as a public resource.
As such, Mozilla operates according to a different calculus from most of the rest of corporate America.
The company serves two markets, not just one, and the second market is arguably more challenging the tight labor pool of engineers, designers, and other tech workers who make software. They have an ideology that must not be broached:
When you consider the importance of that market, Mr. Eichs position on gay marriage wasnt some outré personal stance unrelated to his job; it was a potentially hazardous bit of negative branding in the labor pool, one that was making life difficult for current employees and plausibly reducing Mozillas draw to prospective workers.
This became clear in a string of tweets and thoughtful blog posts that Mozilla employees (a.k.a. Mozillians) published this week. A number of them called for Mr. Eichs resignation. One employee in Britain, Paula Le Dieu, put herself on unpaid leave in protest. Others stopped short of calling for Mr. Eichs ouster but expressed frustration that Mozilla was being tarred with his views, and hope that they could rehabilitate Mr. Eichs ideas about gay marriage...
He is actively harming Mozilla by not making a proper statement on these issues and making things right, wrote Ben Werdmüller, a Mozilla developer.
In other words, those "thoughtful Mozillians" believed Eich apparently needed to undergo "conversion therapy" and become an "ex-Anti-Gay," and then he would be "rehabilitated."
Manjoo bizarrely thought that this Mozilla mutiny is "slightly more nuanced" than liberals cry Negative Branding and get out the (career) guillotine. Imagine if the CEO were a gay activist who'd donated a mere $1,000 to support gay marriage and it ruined the "unit cohesion" of the company:
In such an environment, it isnt out of bounds to consider how a certain leaders political views might affect employees passion for their mission. If the communitys cohesiveness is Mozillas primary advantage over its rivals, the fact that Mr. Eichs views on gay marriage might have posed some danger to that community was almost by definition disqualifying. If his job was to motivate people, and he was instead causing people to question the communitys ethicwell, at the least, you can say he wasnt doing a good job.
To some Mozillians, this became especially clear over the last week, when Mr. Eich refused to recant his position on gay marriage in a series of interviews. In his first test as C.E.O. of Mozilla, he failed to execute, wrote Matthew Riley MacPherson, a developer who works for Mozilla in Montreal. So while I think his donation to Prop 8 spurred the controversy and exposed his inability to think as Mozillas C.E.O. instead of as Brendan Eich, I dont think it was his stance against gay marriage in his home state of California that should be named as the cause of his departure.
Instead, Mr. MacPherson argued, it was Mr. Eichs inability to keep his community together amid a growing firestorm that proved he could not lead the organization.
Mr. MacPherson added: So while the mob might feel like it won, proving that there is some kind of zero-tolerance for homophobia in America, Eichs departure from Mozilla tells a slightly more nuanced story than that.
No, you "thoughtful" Mozilla mobsters, it's not more nuanced than that, no matter how you try to spin it.
If the 2% of the population that is homosexual has a problem with someone not approving of their wet dream of “equality” getting a job; let them boycott the business.
Political re-education for you!
If it can happen to him, it can happen to any California (which was the majority) who voted for Prop 8.
Really?
These SOB’s are scary.
When are the Sodomites going to go after the Islamists for being anti-queer?
I downloaded Pale Moon and got rid of Mozilla. It will take me a while to get accustomed to it because I had a lot of things bookmarked.
True. There’s only one way to get rid of fascists.
Yeah. I won’t really be able to thoroughly have the chance to work with Pale Moon until my next days off of work.
I wish they had an app, though.
Perhaps after more donations.....
When are the Sodomites going to go after the Islamists for being anti-queer?
Well Ben have you seen the feedback on Eich's firing?
I think you progressive gay mafia socialists have shot yourself in the foot.
I won’t be surprised, and just watch everyone run to his business. It is about time Conservatives start fighting back by starting business, but tech business.
"Moralistic"... moralistic? a lynch mob of perverts is now trying to claim the moral high ground.
Double-speak reigns!
I would gladly respond to these fools that their support for that kind of fascism requires the Mussolini solution.
It took me a few minutes, but in the upper left corner is a Pale Moon with a down arrow. This gets you to the bookmarks.
Yep. Just like Firefox. That, or hit ALT and it’ll show up.
Before dumping Firefox, you can export your bookmarks to an html file. Makes it easier to import them into another browser.
This isn't over yet.
No one expects the Gay Inquisition.
Interesting. NYTimes is on a crusade - the Arts and Leisure section has an article by the chief music critic, Anthony Tommasini, castigating the Russian conductor, Valery Gergiev, for not coming out publicly against Putin’s support for banning gay proselytizing to minors. Note Gergiev has stated he is absolutely against any kind of discrimination, but that is not enough for Tommasini - according to him, Gergiev must openly blast Putin, otherwise Gergiev is irresponsible and immoral.
According to the NYTimes, there is only one acceptable point of view -theirs. And if you don’t adopt it then you are a moral coward or moral retrograde.
Thanks
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