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>This kind of drama seems to exist very specifically to programming language design and implementation.

There's that saying about the inverse correlation between impact of the project/the stakes, and people being drama lords.



I saw this in the re-enactment scene in the UK in the 80's and 90's [0], where there were endless schisms and political dramas. The same is true of any "scene" where the consequences of drama are minor and the participants have the scene as a core part of their identity.

I would expect there to be a class of admin in here that do not actually contribute code but have created positions of authority over the project based on "community contribution" only. There's a particular type of person that does this and derives great satisfaction from it. I'm not going to criticise this - often the "community contribution" is real and beneficial - but I don't think it helps when the focus of the team managing the project moves away from the purely technical.

[0] I'm sure it still happens, but I no longer witness it.




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