> How would HN be reacting if this were written by and about a man? There are a lot of gender expectations that punish assertive and matter of fact women as 'bitchy' and 'insensitive'.
Did you just assume my reaction? (partly sarcastic).
If you know anything about tech and blogging and HN, you should know that most posts get flamed and dissected very quickly. People have very strong opinions and have very low tolerance for BS.
The only difference is, people from the "social justice" community always make it personal.
"What? You criticize me? It must be because of my race/skin/gender/religion/orientation, you bigoted monster!".
Despite the post having less details,there is less negativity and uncertainty. For reference as to why that might be, refer to the post you are responding to.
Context matters. Someone who opens https://github.com/opal/opal/issues/941 (read the tweets that she references, it is ridiculous to be upset about them) should not be surprised not to be welcomed by people doing actual work. And having his texts interpreted accordingly.
Really? "Look, someone else wrote a post about leaving github and it wasn't received as negatively! It must because one was a white male and the other was transgender."
No. How about, the tone of the post is completely different?
One Github issue is not sufficient to gain a understanding of what it would be like work with someone. Any blanks that are being filled in here are being done by yours and others baises.This a proven effect in other cases:
https://www.theatlantic.com/sexes/archive/2013/03/are-succes...
So many devils advocates in this thread you'd think Github hired his law firm
Umm, people are not judging Coraline based on a single Github issue, but in her own description of how the people around her behaved and what she says she thought about it. The Opal business is entirely secondary.
It's fine if you think they have biases and you want to cite The Atlantic as some sort of proof of that, but that doesn't mean that those conclusions you don't like are automatically wrong.
Did you just assume my reaction? (partly sarcastic).
If you know anything about tech and blogging and HN, you should know that most posts get flamed and dissected very quickly. People have very strong opinions and have very low tolerance for BS.
The only difference is, people from the "social justice" community always make it personal.
"What? You criticize me? It must be because of my race/skin/gender/religion/orientation, you bigoted monster!".