But. Do we actually have more rightist Linux users now because of it?
I mean that guy is indeed the reason I haven’t tried Omarchy yet, but do people choose their OS based on political leanings? And are maga pedos even smart enough to install it?
People definitely choose which projects to use / buy depending on political leanings or affiliations by the creators / companies behind it, because a “political leaning” is nothing more than a stance on politics, just as there is a stance on FOSS, AI, Conduct, Project direction, yadda yadda.
See Ukraine flags or calls for Palestine support, as an example of recent-ish political stances in software.
It’s just that those stances always work both ways. You will have people choosing omarchy, because “finally an OS without the woke agenda!!!”, you will have people not touching it because fuck nazis, and in IT there’s always the third group of “I don’t know or care who the author is or what he does, the project is good, so I’m using it.”
Am I correct in understand your central question is “what’s the practical impact”?
If so then I think it’s a good theme for conversation. I’ve seen suggestions that “death of the artist” applies here. I’ve also seen “software is apolitical” and similar. While these are valid discussions in their own right: they miss the point.
Using anything created by people whose public speech is actively and consistently attempting to rhetorically enhance their political views implies acceptance or endorsement of those views. It’s a kind of identity politics not dissimilar in concept from brand identity.
What is and is not culturally acceptable is (in part) determined by norms established via association with such identities and the credibility-enhancing displays affirming those associations.
Using Omarchy suggests DHH’s political views are acceptable. It doesn’t matter how much creedance one gives this idea or how much impact it may have. The “Nazi dinner party” principal applies regardless.
what did they do? like genuinely, I just don’t know
DHH, creator of Omarchy endorses xenophobic or racist opinions. You can see that on his blog or on hix X account
https://world.hey.com/dhh/as-i-remember-london-e7d38e64
https://x.com/dhh/status/1884153318320009431
https://x.com/dhh/status/1971480881648013679
https://x.com/dhh/status/1972765204208603631
thanks mate, this helps a ton
But. Do we actually have more rightist Linux users now because of it? I mean that guy is indeed the reason I haven’t tried Omarchy yet, but do people choose their OS based on political leanings? And are maga pedos even smart enough to install it?
People definitely choose which projects to use / buy depending on political leanings or affiliations by the creators / companies behind it, because a “political leaning” is nothing more than a stance on politics, just as there is a stance on FOSS, AI, Conduct, Project direction, yadda yadda.
See Ukraine flags or calls for Palestine support, as an example of recent-ish political stances in software.
It’s just that those stances always work both ways. You will have people choosing omarchy, because “finally an OS without the woke agenda!!!”, you will have people not touching it because fuck nazis, and in IT there’s always the third group of “I don’t know or care who the author is or what he does, the project is good, so I’m using it.”
Am I correct in understand your central question is “what’s the practical impact”?
If so then I think it’s a good theme for conversation. I’ve seen suggestions that “death of the artist” applies here. I’ve also seen “software is apolitical” and similar. While these are valid discussions in their own right: they miss the point.
Using anything created by people whose public speech is actively and consistently attempting to rhetorically enhance their political views implies acceptance or endorsement of those views. It’s a kind of identity politics not dissimilar in concept from brand identity.
What is and is not culturally acceptable is (in part) determined by norms established via association with such identities and the credibility-enhancing displays affirming those associations.
Using Omarchy suggests DHH’s political views are acceptable. It doesn’t matter how much creedance one gives this idea or how much impact it may have. The “Nazi dinner party” principal applies regardless.
I just don’t want to have anything to do with something made by someone who would kill me given the opportunity.
Dhh openly supports right wing activism and hates diversity and inclusion. That’s the surface.
The guy’s name is DHH, I’d say to read his blog but that would generate traffic for him. He’s one of those “West has fallen” types, nuff said.