1. BSD community hostility toward linux: unreasonable
2. BSD community hostility toward being mistaken for linux: unreasonable
3. BSD community illusion of transparency: also unreasonable!
Some basic reasoning about the distribution of computer skills and world knowledge shows that two hostilities I mentioned above, especially the latter — hostility toward being mistaken for linux — are empirically unreasonable. [BSD DISCOURSE ENTERS THE AETHER SOMEHOW]
Alice, linux user: What's BSD about? What does it do?
Bob, BSD user: It's like linux, but better ;)
Alice: Oh? What makes it better?
Bob: <list of things that linux does too>
Alice: But linux has <equivalents of the BSD things>
Bob: Better license?
Alice: I don't really care about that
Bob: No bloat! Also, it's an OS, not just a kernel.
Alice: what
Bob: No breaking changes! Your old scripts will still work.
Alice: I've never really noticed problems with that.
Bob: Look, ever heard of macOS?
Alice: yup, can't stand it
Bob: ...
In other words, even most linux people don't really know what BSD is in exact terms, and BSD proponents typically either can't or won't convincingly state the case for BSD among people more familiar with linux. In some ways, this is natural for a few obvious reasons:
> one of the languages I speak
why would i care which languages you speak
you are not me
i am not you
neither of us are everyone else
>try it
perhaps instead of me doing any of that, you could simply stop arrogating reflexively in your internet comments and presuming to know the inner contents of others' minds (you do not)
>semicolons
the purpose of your original reply was to condescend in typical nerdsplaining fashion. the reason my reply to you, in turn, was written like it was, including the side mention of semicolons, was to escalate abruptly and unambiguously, such that there was no ambiguity as to what i thought of the situation. i was expressing contempt. it's merely a circumstantial convenience that semicolons do happen to be dogshit punctuation used as epistemic crutch notation in prose