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Notes -
I think you have the Dixie Chicks example exactly reversed. The Dixie Chicks decided to speak out against the United States as part of their public performance. In other words, they're analogous to Synchthing here, and the people who boycotted them are analogous to someone like you who refuses to contribute to Synchthing because of what they are doing with their politics.
Also, this keeps getting brought up over and over again as the only right-wing example anyone can think of that's analogous to cancellation, and it really isn't. Doing something in front of a friendly audience that you don't want the rest of your audience to hear about is not the same thing as doing it in private. It's just something that you really wish were private even though it's not.
(reposted at the right place)
I think that there is implicit expectation that we expect things with utility to be apolitical unlike things without utility. So a singer shouting Slava Ukraini while being unable to find it on a map is one thing. My screwdriver being painted in ukrainan flag is something else.
So - if it is something like art that I am consuming - politics is fine-ish. If it is something I am using it is not.
I think we might not expect things without utility to be completely apolitical, but that's different from expecting nothing.
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