soc-ctte default position, was: electing multiple people
Russ Allbery <rra@debian.org> wrote:
> It depends. Being able to reach consensus may make it easier for the
> soc-ctte to look at the situation and go "there's strong disagreement here
> and even if we're mostly on one side, we realize that and we should decide
> that we can't really intervene." [...]
This raises a question.
I assumed that soc-ctte would intervene somehow on any issue referred
to them, even if it is just to say "let the existing processes stand".
If it ends up at soc-ctte, there is a problem to resolve.
However, the above suggests that if soc-ctte is weakly divided (mostly
on one side), it shouldn't intervene.
What should be soc-ctte's default position? To do nothing, or to
announce their (maybe-weak) support for the existing situation?
As you may know, I believe that ignoring problems is a bug, so I'd
expect soc-ctte to make decisions, even if mostly null, rather than do
nothing. If it will mostly do nothing, is it worth creating it?
Regards,
--
MJ Ray http://mjr.towers.org.uk/email.html tel:+44-844-4437-237 -
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