Crell
Crell
Crell
Note: this was the start of a CWG complaint after noticing a pattern of behaviour on Drupal.org
and twitter. In the end I didn't make a formal complaint to the CWG, and decided instead to
challenge some of Crell's public statements on twitter/Drupal.org instead.
The original draft complaint had a handful of links and quotes, but it's been added to in the past
week due to suggestions and other people's recollections etc. It's not the private/semi-private
evidence that was submitted to the CWG or DA (some of which has been linked to on the reddit
thread, not in here), nor is it intended to replace that.
Sharing this now because there have been multiple statements from multiple people saying that
Crell was always polite in their interactions with them. This was not my experience of him.
Note that Crell in all of these discussions is 'polite' (in the sense of not swearing or using slurs,
or attacking people directly) even when he's trivialising gender identity, minimising chattel
slavery or suggesting that not drinking is the best rape prevention.
--
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/390620966742536192
Larry Garfield @Crell 17 Oct 2013
More
@TechGirlGeek @Slate False dichotomy. Saying "don't be easy prey" does not excuse the predator.
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/390620776539230208
Larry Garfield @Crell 17 Oct 2013
@ksenzee No, reduce the rate of sexual assault among college-aged people. Read the article.
Feminists shd support "how to not be a target".
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/481230158297190400
Larry Garfield @Crell 24 Jun 2014
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@AmyStephen Maybe a sea of hormones and alcohol is a bad idea? Don't put hundreds of teen
boys and booze together, with or without girls?
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/513110563749371904
Larry Garfield @Crell 20 Sep 2014
@ryanaslett So guilty until proven innocent if the person you're hitting is a spouse, but not otherwise.
Check.
17th October, 2013
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/390601898731917312
The Best Rape Prevention: Tell College Women to Stop Getting So Wasted
http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2013/10/sexual_assault_and_drinking_teach_w
omen_the_connection.html via @slate
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/390620966742536192
@TechGirlGeek @Slate What is terrible? The rate of sexual assault, or the suggestion that less
binge drinking could help lower it?
https://twitter.com/merlinofchaos/status/557241218896117761
Larry Garfield @Crell 20 Jan 2015
@AmyStephen False dichotomy. It's not "women are property" vs. "feminism today, who cares if
gamers or nerds are hurt as collateral damage"
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/192994663995674628
@eaton Consider what the reaction would be if Kermit ever gave Ms. Piggy the smack she's
deserved for 30 years.
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/192994440074362880
@eaton Compare the # of commercials that show a stupid guy on his wife's leash vs. stupid
woman on her husband's leash.
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/589555027007578112
"@LouisatheLast @snipeyhead Actually I know for a fact none of my ancestors owned slaves."
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/791653311334277120
@lukestokes @adamculp "I voluntarily enter myself into a slavery relationship." - So you're good with
that?
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@lukestokes You're dodging. Slave: "person who is owned". Ppl historically have willingly entered that
state frequently.
Larry Garfield @Crell 28 Oct 2016
@lukestokes But even more generally, if you voluntarily enter into a situation that restricts your voluntary
actions in the future, ethical?
This academic paper has some background on the history of debt peonage in Mexico:
https://repository.asu.edu/attachments/170716/content/Kiser_asu_0010E_15356.pdf
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/205667143801507840
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@ashedryden You are aware that slavery in the US was ended by the legal action of a
bunch of white men, right?
(NOTE FROM CATCH: Harriet Tubman might disagree with you there).
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/778619131033743360
@mattfarina There's also a reason the feminist movement has an index of "ways to shut down
anyone who disagrees with you."
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/672153562424692736
@chriscaple @mattfarina @gdemet "Feminazi": "feminist who is unnecessarily forceful and anti-
male in her feminist advocacy." OK or no?
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/192996946426871809
@rogersaner @eaton As a believer in legal equality, I reject legal discrimination in toto.
"Reverse-discrimination" is still distrimination.
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/23938068373
Larry Garfield @Crell 9 Sep 2010
@jackaponte A female-dominated field is not a problem but a male-dominated field is. That is a
sexually discriminatory/sexist position.
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/23940864560
Larry Garfield @Crell 9 Sep 2010
@jackaponte Actually, as a man I see a double-standard that vilifies men and approves of anti-male
attitudes but not anti-female.
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/713375021671059457
@klimpong @skoop @grmpyprogrammer So should a fundamentalist Christian organizer be
expected to exclude prominent gay or trans speakers?
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/714532457069019136
Larry Garfield @Crell
@mcclure111 Either way, it's still < 1%. So I don't think that goes as far as "saying 'biological
gender' implies you're a biggot."
https://twitter.com/crell/status/580803224686444544
This is minor but general pattern of random links to anti-feminist think pieces.
https://twitter.com/grmpyprogrammer/status/713379994932744192
Thread in general but also @grmpyprogrammer I've had ppl object to my presence at non-tech
confs before bc of my "beliefs" and associations.
More of this:
https://twitter.com/drupliconissad/status/713391780851544064
@radiomorillo English, French, Norwegian, Russian, and Turk are all different, too. Not just
"White".
In response to thoughts on the Hispanic/Latino category on forms, for people who are mixed
race.
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/699998812564168704
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@mrspete It's a genetic statement. Applies whether it's civil rights or neo-Nazi or OSS.
Bad behavior reflects badly on "your team".
https://twitter.com/Crell/status/699306212022710272
@chriscaple So a black activist insulting a person for speaking to a white guy makes that person
evil? Guilt by association? /c @amystephen
Chris Caple @chriscaple 16 Feb 2016
\
@Crell That's not what I'm talking about. She demonstrates profound ignorance on race & racism &
appears to've embraced white nationalism.
(I believe the blog post referenced from the original tweet from now suspended account this this
one: https://medium.com/@amystephen/my-blacklivesmatter-and-altright-experiences-
44b911cbe871#.4o1bes8pr
@mrspete @gdemet @mattfarina An evil misogynist sexist pig. Even mention "men" and
"rights" together and you're obviously a Red-Piller.
Twitter favourite:
Drupal.org
https://www.drupal.org/node/2275877#comment-8855213
While chx's delivery needs work, he is correct that some of the comments in this thread take a very clear
framing of "if you disagree then you're a bad person". That is no way to hold a conversation, it's a way to
railroad. Come on Drupal, we can have an adult conversation without that sort of tactic.
So, if we have community members who express that this naming is problematic, and causes
them consternation or stress
Do we? Honest question. So far this thread consists of a bunch of white men trying to extrapolate what
someone else *would* think. (I cannot determine Les's ethnic background from his photo with
certainty.) I do know there are two Jews in this thread (including myself), who have their own cultural
history with slavery and discrimination. (That whole Exodus thing.)
We should not force a change on "might possibly could be offended". That way lies the hyper-sensitivity of
the sort many complain is happening in various places; don't give them more fodder.
---
Emphasis added.
1. He claims that slavery was not specific to colonalism. This conflates chattel slavery
(racialised, hereditary ownership of people) with other forms of forced labour like peonage,
indentured servitude, convict labour which existed in various forms geographically and in different
historical periods. Where you limit 'slavery' to chattel slavery or all forms of forced labour is up for
debate and colloquialism, but it doesn't stop there:
2. He then claims that European colonalism in the 1800s 'ended [slavery]'.
3. However, in the US the 13th amendment combined with Jim Crow/Convict Leasing meant
that forced labour continued in the US until 1945. The abolition of slavery was only of chattel
slavery, which Crell's already conflated with all other forms of forced labour in the same sentence.
This is well documented in Blackmon's "Slavery By Another Name" (or probably "The 13th" doc
which I've not seen yet).
4. Additionally various forms of forced labour continued in European colonies well into the
20th century, in India, Kenya etc.
I don't think that any of these statements are a DCOC violation in themselves, the only thing that might be
in that comment is trying to 'guess the race' of Les. The effect of all this is to trivialise people's points with
what superficially looks like a 'polite' and 'intellectual' statement. There's no swearing, but this line of
argument is extremely offensive and essentially a denial of colonial/US history.
Additionally, given the revelations of this week, his interest in this issue has taken on new meaning for
me, which I'm not sure I have an opinion on yet. This was the issue that made me decide I wanted
nothing further to do with him at the time though.
Various transphobic comments on https://www.drupal.org/node/752452 (2010)
Comment #45
I truly do not care what sex you are, what gender you are, what sex you wish you were,
what gender you wish you were, or whatever else. In the context of d.o, I care about how
good your coding, documenting, or usability skillz are. That's it. There are contexts in which
I do care, and they do not involve Drupal.
---
Comment #63
If people are so hung up on "gender identity", rename the field to "Sex", which even
gender-advocacy groups acknowledge is tied to biology rather than fluid relativistic psycho-
social dynamics.
--
Response from Chacha Sikes:
"spamjim, damien, crell: many of the things you have said have deeply offended me on
behalf of all my queer self, all my queer & feminist friends & on behalf of other things that
could be said by accident in any other discussion about difference. Frankly, it is a bit
frightening. It isn't just you - and my emotions really have nothing to do with you
personally. The dismissive attitude is quite painful as read via a discussion thread. Sadly,
this is extremely widespread and typical behavior among 'smart men' in technology & the
sciences. It does not make Open Source very attractive as a career field. You/They will
trivialize something that is not your/their experience and that is not OK. Shoving this issue
under the rug doesn't help either."
---
Crell again:
Ben: I would note that your post makes the tacit assumption that a "post-gender" society
would be a utopia. That's a value judgment that is not universally accepted, and I believe
such a viewpoint is actually the minority position in the US, and certainly worldwide. That's
the point I'm making. By switching to a more politically correct gender selector, we are
making a rather significant and controversial political statement that has absolutely nothing
to do with software development. Do we really want to go there? Are we comfortable with
the ramifications of doing so? Do we want to make the implication that the belief that
gender is not entirely fluid and self-defined is inherently inferior? That's the tacit assumption
being made in this thread, but I don't think we realize that is such a contentious position.
Comment #91
May 2012 groups.drupal.org. The original DCOC discussion.
Ironic!
Disclaimer: I was one of those arguing that we shouldn't automatically assume that it was
"right" to include every possible gender identity, and got attacked for "not understanding"
someone else's perspective. Yes, I did consider that discriminatory.
Presentations:
Blogs:
https://www.garfieldtech.com/blog/tmi-part-2
I believe that human psychology is shaped in part by evolution, and that does impact the sexes.
Men and women have, on average, differences in their neurology that can impact personality.
(For information on how this affects children, it has been suggested Boys by Daniel J. Hodgins is
a good resource.) These are averages, and trends across a population only and say nothing about
an individual person.
http://itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/archives/004926.html
http://lizditz.typepad.com/i_speak_of_dreams/2007/09/more-on-dan-hod.html
http://laurietobyedison.com/body-impolitic-blog/2007/09/a-crockus-of-shit/
Also see follow-up comment from "A Teacher" which pull back from Hodgins, looks to me like
someone did some googling: https://www.garfieldtech.com/comment/2682#comment-2682
These are predominantly studies of autism (from googling the references), looking at the effects
of high testosterone levels during pregnancy, looks to be relatively recent research and doesn't
reference gender roles as such (nor does Larry's recent blog post as such of course).
"This relationship was seen within sex as well as when the sexes were combined, suggesting this
is an effect of fT [fetal testosterone] rather than of sex per se."
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18547459
Reddit:
Autumn 2016
And that's before we even mention that many of those women are "off limits" because
there's a work relationship and if you so much as hint at interest it could be interpreted
as sexual harassment. (Not that actual sexual harassment doesn't happen, it does, but
the splash damage from it is that non-harassing interest is easy to read as such, and
then you're automatically in the wrong.)
And if you try to get to know the woman first before deciding to ask her out, you run
the risk of getting interpreted as non-interested so she discounts you early.
("Friendzoning" is the politically incorrect term, but it's a real thing, just with
a bit more complex dynamics.)
https://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/52vlai/serious_men_whats_something_that_woul
d_surprise/d7p86kc/
So, that's my childhood and early 20s. Then I hit the workforce in IT and WHAM!
Sexism! It's everywhere! Women are being driven out in droves! Men are mean to
women in every subtle way possible! Women are being assaulted and/or raped by the
thousands! What's that, you don't agree? CHECK YOUR PRIVILEGE!!!
There's a technical term for one's mental state at that point. It's called "cognitive
dissonance". Also known as "wait, WTF?" After being raised in a pop culture that
had a rather visceral double-standard, in favor of women, FLIP!, everything in
culture is about how women are oppressed and if you're a man then it's either
your fault or you're "an ally" who must just sit back and listen because "no
one cares what you think!" (Actual quote from a prominent Twitter-feminist to a
male "ally" who dared disagree with her.)
"Wait, what? That doesn't jive with my experience to date at all." But god-forbid you
disagree. If you question claims that do not fit your experience, you're just
"mansplaining". (Side note: Fuck that word and everyone who tries to use it.) Or you're
given the trump card of "check your privilege", to which you're not allowed to respond.
There's even an entire website dedicated to listing all the ways to "respond to" (ie, shut
down conversation with) anyone who dares disagree. (http://geekfeminism.wikia.com/)
There's a term for every possible response, and how to put it down rather than listen to
it.
But how dare you mention any of the anti-male problems with society, or the
double-standards. "No, sexism is only when it's against women. Double-standards
against men don't matter because you're privileged. You don't get a term for it."
Now, look at that cognitive dissonance. Is it any wonder we get "not all men", "I'm a
nice guy", and other defensive statements?
Now consider every definition of "being a man" that you've been exposed to, even
subconsciously, derided as sexist, evil, oppressive (toward women or you or both), or
otherwise bad. (Some of which are entirely true, mind you.) Yet no new definition of
"being a man" is forthcoming. Even the suggestion of there being such a thing is
"oppressive"... unless of course it's synonymous with everything you've ever been
taught is feminine. So "being a good man" means... being more feminine? That's the
messaging guys get these days, whether intentional or not.
https://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/52vlai/serious_men_whats_something_that_woul
d_surprise/d7pm8nf/
Think that's overblown? Mention the word "dongle" when the wrong woman is within
earshot and you get fired. True story:
http://geekfeminism.wikia.com/wiki/PyCon_2013_forking_and_dongles_incident (And
lest anyone think otherwise, no I am not endorsing any of the blowback she got;
threats of violence are never acceptable. Period.)
And of course when someone tries to put together a conference to have frank
conversations without that double-standard, TRUCEConf, she gets shouted
down primarily by other feminists with vitriol such as this:
http://geekfeminism.org/2013/11/10/on-truceconf/ (Disclaimer: I was a
backer of TRUCEConf before it was cancelled.)
I am sure at this point someone will pipe up and say "false equivalence! That's nothing
compared to getting rape threats every day!" I am not saying it is equivalent. I am not
even having an equivalence conversation. That's not the point.
You asked what it's like to be a man in this culture today. It is seeing this split
worldview and feeling like you're not allowed to point it out. It's being told that because
women's viewpoints are so often dismissed (which I'm not disputing), it's OK to dismiss
yours. It's walking on eggshells to avoid making women walk on eggshells.
It's being able to name the people you know and respect, both men and women, who,
upon seeing this comment, will likely give you hell for being "insensitive" or "part of the
problem" or "not empathetic enough" or some such. It's spending a week deciding if I
should post this comment anonymously or not for that reason.
https://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/52vlai/serious_men_whats_something_that_woul
d_surprise/d7pm9c7/
APPENDIX: PHP-FIG
PHP-FIG is a separate organisation to Drupal, but Larry Garfield semi-officially represents
Drupal on it.
PHP-FIG recently had a long controversy, in which several participants including Larry
attempted to remove a founding member.
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/php-fig/w38tCU4mdgU/ww0kKM0vAAAJ
This is an important moment for FIG, as we look to hold one of the group's founders
accountable for his actions. I therefore want to lay out why it is imperative that we do so.
...
calm passive-aggressive bullying that technically stays within the letter of the law, such as it is,
but is clearly designed to intimidate and belittle opponents, and objection to any structural
changes or actions that would restrict his ability to do so.
..
The net result is people being driven away from FIG, including leading members of the PHP
Community. Several of them have spoken out above. I hope that others that have remained
silent will do so.
https://blog.vanillaforums.com/help/how-to/dealing-with-toxic-community-member/
Paul Jones is, at this time, a net-negative for FIG. It is indeed possible that he doesn't realize
just how damaging he is, and that the above behavior is unintentional. I do not know if that is
the case. In the end, it doesn't matter. The behavior is real, the toxic effect is real, and our
responsibility to state that we will not tolerate it is real.
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/php-fig/w38tCU4mdgU/yA-WSOwfAQAJ
"I doubt that a standards committee will really remain relevant if it
cannot deal with supposedly toxic people"
Haven't we learned by now that is the worst possible way to deal with
hostile or toxic individuals? Have we learned nothing in the last few
years, as an Internet community?
Harm is being done: Is the answer really "well so be it, only the
think-skinned will survive"? Do we really want to say "Well man up and
deal with it, bro"?
Do people really feel FIG would get more respect in the broader PHP
community if we said, explicitly, "we don't mind if you're a jerk,
people need to grow a thicker skin"? Really? I don't believe that for
a second.
There is some threshold of behavior past which a person is
actively destructive to a community, no matter how smart or insightful
they may be on any given topic.
See also:
http://anildash.com/2011/07/if-your-websites-full-of-assholes-its-your-fault.html
You are correct that FIG currently has no explicit "ban from the list" bylaw. That was a flaw in its original
construction, frankly, albeit a common one for such a loose group in its early days. At the moment, the
closest we have is this ability of the Secretaries: "Moderate discussions on github, the mailing list and IRC
channels to ensure that an appropriate environment is maintained". Whether "moderate" includes "ban"
is not specified, but over the last 6 months we've decently-well established by precedent that it can. It's
also easier to do with a non-voting-rep than a voting rep, since a voting rep, well, needs to be able to post
in order to vote.
To be frank, those arguing in various forms that it's inappropriate for FIG, or just for "a standards body"
(why?), to hold people accountable for their actions are arguing that FIG must tolerate any bad behavior,
no matter how bad. It's begging for hostile, toxic, and abusive behavior to become standard, because
that's what inevitably happens. Or perhaps they're just hoping that we can stick to informal, behind-the-
scenes enforcement so that it's easier for those who don't care if they're being rude and disruptive to
ignore it entirely. That's no good either.
In the end, the question is simple: Is Paul -- in aggregate over time -- acting "inappropriately and to the
detriment of PHP-FIG's ability to meet its objectives", and is Paul unwilling to address the problem? If you
feel the answer to those questions is yes, vote remove. If not, don't.
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/php-fig/w38tCU4mdgU/pOBJDpx9CwAJ
The second post in this thread, from me, included a link to nearly a dozen past examples. Each
individually is arguably minor point. However, taken all together, over an extended period of time (my
examples go back only this year, but Paul's been on the list for years) it creates a pattern that many are
tired of.
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/php-fig/AROJwMfvMrk/LT6kcpwORbwJ
--Larry Garfield