this post was submitted on 18 Jun 2023
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While I agree with the first part, I think the last sentence is a really really bad take. What is and isn't illegal depends very much on governments and is usually pretty arbitrary. And especially leftists get persecuted overly harshly in many countries of the global north. So even though I don't agree with the views of the two Lemmy devs, I don't wish "justice" on anyone.
Yes, good point. It's more like: we as a society must decide what is and isn't acceptable as far as free speech goes and enshrine this in law. Then it is a matter of applying the laws rather than judging case by case as individuals.
In this case, The political discourse of the devs doesn't seem directly related to Lemmy's development. Of course, libre software is very much in line with leftist ideology; what I mean is that they do not seem to impose their views or skew ours through their work as devs. They don't even use their position as devs to publicize their discourse; people had to dig to find them.
If their political discourse is harmful, I'd argue that it is not to us, as individuals, to condemn them and to choose an adequate punishment, e.g. boycott the seemingly unrelated Lemmy project.
Of course, it is obviously to us, as individuals, to decide if we want to participate on Lemmy, or even donate to the devs for their work on Lemmy. I choose to do both even when I don't agree with the devs and when I think their discourse about human right in the CCP and Russia might be harmful.