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Comment by WorldMaker

2 hours ago

Not to mention when the single, tangible, vocal stakeholder can also be asked to be responsible for documentation (PEPs, etc) and PRs. Especially in open source there is a huge difference between "a lot of people asked about this" and "one person asked about this, but was passionate enough about it and open enough to following the process and the feedback loops to champion it all the way across the finish line".

I don't have any issue with what you're saying if that's what happened. There's quite a gap between that sort of reasoned explanation and treating concerns about large stakeholders versus large numbers of small one with derision.

  • For what it is worth, I was trying not to make a value judgment on it, especially not with relation to this specific instance, I was hopefully just recognizing it as a motivating factor in general open source politics. Sometimes that is quite regretful because it is anti-democratic and does look like favoritism or worse cronyism when it plays out in that way of "we listened to the person/company that built and tested a prototype and did all the work to standardize and then PR it over the many developers that wanted an idea but didn't have the time/money/bandwidth to implement it themselves".