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Re: [Recentattendees] IETF 100, Singapore -- proposed path forward and request for input

2016-05-21 13:15:08
This is my perspective:

1) Fully respect any efforts for inclusiveness
2) Fully respect people that want to bring their families to IETF meetings
3) Fully respect having the meetings in as safe places as we can
4) However, what is our MAIN target? Doing the work.

But we should put all those in a priority list, and I think clearly number 4 is 
the top priority, followed by 3, and so on.

Despite my full respect, sympathize and understanding of the situation and my 
disagreement with the Singapore rules, I don’t think we should put on top 
priority having family in the meetings, because there is the option of not 
bringing the family and do the work.

Otherwise, in EVERY location, we will have, most probably, a regulation that is 
against having the meeting there because personal/familiar situation, including 
many frequent venues. Should we then find just one or two countries were 
everybody has no problem and always go to the same place and avoid spending the 
time in all this debates ?

What about announcing venues and cancelling because whatever circumstances? I 
will agree that a major event, such as a war or a REAL critical health 
situation can force to change a meeting venue, but not if this is not a real 
problem and create problems to people that (as I do, typically one year ago) 
buy the flight and hotel in non-refundable rates, from my own pocket, to allow 
me to go there.

For example, there was a recent cancellation of an ICANN meeting in Panama, 
which not a real health problem (Zika), which we know was also around our 
Buenos Aires meeting.

Or is IETF going to cover those expenses in case of a cancellation to all the 
attendees that already invested in flight/hotel ? In my opinion, if we do that, 
IETF/ISOC is liable for such a responsibility, and consequently we CAN’T do 
that, unless we contract an insurance that cover those situations.

Do we have that insurance?

What happens if because terrorism a country turns to be unsafe and we have 
planned a meeting 2-3 years in advance? For example, Paris/France, as it was 
suggested as a possible venue for next meetings in Europe a few weeks ago, 
seems to be less and less safe. Should we cancel it as a possible venue, even 
if we announce it as a confirmed venue in a few weeks but terrorism increases 
there ?

I don’t think so. I’m sorry, but let’s be honest with ourselves. A bombing can 
happen in every place. It can be in any country. It has been in Belgium, in 
France, in UK, in Spain, in US. It can happen in every place, we can’t be 
defeated by terror, and as we are planning several years in advance, this must 
not be considered, neither for rejecting venues, neither for cancelling venues 
once announced, unless there is unanimity that is major break, such as a war, 
or a death penalty just for going there, etc.

Otherwise we can never plan ahead, and consequently can never have meetings.

Regards,
Jordi


-----Mensaje original-----
De: ietf <ietf-bounces(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org> en nombre de Eric Rescorla 
<ekr(_at_)rtfm(_dot_)com>
Responder a: <ekr(_at_)rtfm(_dot_)com>
Fecha: sábado, 21 de mayo de 2016, 19:05
Para: Ted Hardie <ted(_dot_)ietf(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com>
CC: <venue-selection(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org>, IETF list <ietf(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org>
Asunto: Re: [Recentattendees] IETF 100, Singapore -- proposed path forward and 
request for input

This seems like a reasonable assessment.

Citing Fred's document again, such travel barriers to entry must be
"researched, noted, and carefully considered." While (as the document
makes clear) "there are no perfect venues", I think the balance of the
evidence suggests that Singapore does not meet this important
criterion, and absent some very compelling reason why we must meet in
Singapore, should not be selected for future meetings.

With regard to the question of this meeting, it seems to me that the
relevant standard should not be whether "it it is possible to have a
successful meeting in Singapore" but rather whether, whether at
this time it is prohibitive to move to a location that better
meets our inclusiveness criteria. I am not able to assess this
question, but I believe that the IAOC should do so before reaching
a final decision to proceed with meeting in this location.

-Ekr





On Sat, May 21, 2016 at 9:32 AM, Ted Hardie 
<ted(_dot_)ietf(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com> wrote:

Howdy,

  
After a discussion with Jari and Alissa about the upcoming meeting in 
Singapore, I realized that something Adam said actually suggests that we
need to recast this discussion.  In his message, Adam said:


      
It is very difficult to interpret the effect of potentially oppressive 
environments on the potentially oppressed if you are not a member of 
that group.



   It's not only hard for those who are
not in the affected class, it's difficult for any member of that class 
to speak for anyone else.  That suggests that trying to have this 
discussion based on the expressions of individuals of their own comfort 
is the wrong way to have it.  There are, after all, too many cases in 
which it is not easy for the most affected to make their concerns known.

  
I think the other possible (and better) way to have that discussion is 
to start from a set of community agreed principles, and then to ask 
whether a particular venue meets those principles or not. The full 
community discussion of that has not yet occurred, but in the spirit of 
"the Internet runs on Internet-drafts", I'm starting from the current 
working text.

   Fred's document articulates the principle this way:


   Inclusiveness:
         We would like to facilitate the onsite or remote participation of
         anyone who wants to be involved.  Every country has limits on who
         it will permit within its borders.  This principle of
         inclusiveness militates against the selection of venues within
         countries that impose visa regulations and/or laws that
         effectively exclude people on the basis of race, religion, gender,
         sexual orientation, or national origin, and to a lesser extent,
         reduces the likelihood of selecting countries that use such
         attributes to make entry difficult.




  
This is cast in terms of entry and exclusion, but it is actually about 
participation.  If a country's rules prevent participation by a class of
people, that country would be "militated against", in the words of the 
draft.  

  In Singapore, there are classes of people who are 
effectively excluded (e.g. any same sex couple whose child is of age to 
need both parents present).   Whether any member of that class speaks up
at the moment is not the issue, if we believe a family member of that 
class should be able to attend. 

  On that basis, I believe the 
IAOC should not keep Singapore in the set for future meetings; whether 
it can effectively shift this meeting or not, I leave for a discussion 
of the practicality of a change.

regards,

Ted



    





On Tue, May 17, 2016 at 3:19 PM, Adam Roach <adam(_at_)nostrum(_dot_)com> 
wrote:

On 5/17/16 13:14, IAOC Chair wrote:

The IAOC meetings committee reviewed the options for IETF 100, including 
investigating costs and possibilities of moving the meeting to a different 
location.  In keeping with the updated process outlined below, they checked 
with official advisory sources and consulted with specialty travel services, 
frequent travelers, and local representatives about the concerns that have 
been raised.  The input received from those sources is consistent with the 
text on http://travel.state.gov [1].

From that research, at a strictly practical level, the IAOC believes that it 
is possible to have a successful meeting in Singapore.  The IAOC proposes 
that holding the meeting in Singapore is the best option for IETF 100 at this 
time.

Next Step:

The IAOC would like to hear from the community by June 1st, 2016 on barriers 
to holding a successful meeting in Singapore. Responses should be directed to 
venue-selection(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org




I have a hard time making a valid evaluation of this topic. I suspect many 
people who will weigh in over the next few weeks are in a similar situation, 
even if they don't realize it. I include the IAOC in this characterization.

It is very difficult to interpret the effect of potentially oppressive 
environments on the potentially oppressed if you are not a member of that 
group. It would be presumptuous for a majority straight population to make 
this decision on behalf of those people actually impacted.

So I'm going to withhold expressing support for or opposition to the proposed 
course of action until we hear from GLBTQ IETFers in light of the information 
the IAOC is offering as rationale for continuing to pursue Singapore as a 
venue.

But to be clear: I will almost certainly forgo attending a meeting at which 
any of my GLBTQ colleagues felt unwelcome. I would actively encourage others 
to adopt the same stance. Whether this forms a barrier to a successful meeting 
is up for debate; however, It would almost certainly be a setback for the 
working groups I chair.

/a

















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