On 12/26/2015 06:13 PM, Bryan Bishop wrote: > I think you'll find that there hasn't been stalling regarding an > uncontroversial hard-fork deployment. You might be confusing an > uncontroversial hard-fork decision instead with how developers have > brought up many issues about various (hard-forking) block size > proposals.... I suspect this is what you're intending to mention > instead, given your mention of "capacity emergencies" and also the > subject line. I think you'll find that writing in that tone makes one come across as a complete and utter douchebag. I suspect what you're intending to do is to use faux-polite condescension to bait me into responding in a way to will justify my subsequent banning from this mailing list so that the people who aren't interested in answering certain uncomfortable questions will have a plausible excuse for preventing them from being asked here. > There wasn't 6 months of "stonewalling" or "denial" about an > uncontroversial hard-fork proposal. There has been extensive discussion > regarding the controversial (flawed?) properties of other (block size) > proposals. But that's something else. Much of this has been rehashed ad > nauseum on this mailing list already... thankfully I think your future > emails could be improved and made more useful if you were to read the > mailing list archives, try to employ more careful reasoning, etc. Thanks. Actually there's been 3+ years of stonewalling, deception, conflicts of interest, and outright crimes, which have been generally ignored by those who are desperately attempting to assume good faith. The purpose of my email was to remind everyone that nobody is going to get away with avoiding ownership of the consequences of their actions. If the network experiences a painful upgrade because six months of time that could have been used to prepare a smooth upgrade was lost, the individuals who squandered that time own the result. They can't get around it by demanding six additional months, as if they had nothing to do with the six lost months.