By the way, since when am I trying to compare en/jp and tc/sc? I was
merely responding to something somebody else said about SC and TC
users "living in the same universe" or something.
On Sat, 11 Sep 2004 14:44:36 +0800, Lorenzarius <lorenzarius(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On Fri, 10 Sep 2004 21:43:55 -0700, Mark Williamson
<node.ue(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Chances are, someday there will be a way to
synchronize en: and jp:
easily too. How is that relevant?
You are using an inappropriate comparison. How can one compare the
difference between English and Japanese to the difference between TC
and SC? Linguists would laugh to death on hearing this.
Yes, I tried it. So what?
So what? That means we are solving the problem. While you're evading
the problem, by simply splitting zh into zh-tw and zh-cn.
"Community consensus"? Let me give you
a scenario here which I find
comparable to the "community consensus" on zh:
The People's Republic of China decides to hold a vote on the fate of
Taiwan. Taiwanese people as well as mainlanders get to vote. The
result is an overwhelming majority in favour of immediate
"reunification" using force if nessecary. This is not a fair vote,
because since the PRC is by far the majority here their opinion is
much more well-represented than that of Taiwan. I think this is
similar to the situation on zh:, with a group of simplified users -
including you - and a mere handful of traditional users who agree with
them reaching a "consensus" to keep a unified zh:.
So, you have two choices here: we can run Wikipedia like it is the PRC
and hold a sham vote where one group of people gets to decide the fate
of another group of people, or we can run it *fairly* where we have
private e-mail discussions between Traditional users and the relevant
Wikipedia people, ie Tim Starling, Jimbo, etc etc.
This is not a comparable scenario.
Mainland Chinese does not live in Taiwan. They are not the people of
Taiwan. Thus they have no right to decide whether Taiwan should do
anything.
However, wikipedians from mainland does not only read SC exclusively.
Most of them can read both TC and SC. That makes them eligible to vote
on this TC/SC issue.
And why do you think mainlanders would vote in favor of unification?
Is that because you have some prejudice against people from mainland?
If this is so, this again shows you that you don't understand the zh
community.
Lorenzarius