On Tuesday, 8 November 2022 at 10:46:55 UTC, Quirin Schroll wrote:
>I was here in 2016/17 and 2020/21 when American presidential elections took place, which were probably the most political events in the recent past concerning an English-language forum.
I'm not sure if this is about party politics. I decided look at RustConf 2020 just in order to understand what this is all about.
https://youtu.be/IwPRu5FhfIQ?t=1479
This presentation is not really about party politics but more that they claim using politics in order for them to reach their goal, that is politics is a tool. They did not mention anything regarding politics connected to any country/state government. The conference is more similar to a big corporate event where CEO/CTO talks with big words how wonderful their company/products are and insert big words in order to achieve their business goals.
I haven't followed the Rust community everywhere so I can't say if it more political on other channels. Going through posts on Twitter would take too long time for me.
There is a cppcon talk that is more political to me and that is where they reference early 1900 century communist intellectuals in order to "change" C++. This talk is more political to me than I've found in Rust. I couldn't find this one on Youtube anymore, maybe you are better than me.
Are there political undertones among programmers that they cannot suppress during official presentations? Maybe that's the case.
In the case of D, it's kind of inverted that we almost lack the non-technical staff. Almost all of the people here have a software engineering background which means that for example compared to Rust we are lousy at marketing or understanding the needs of all the different types of programming/programmers.