Eric S. Raymond

Eric S. Raymond is a computer programmer, advocate of open source software, neo-pagan, and author or editor of several written works, including ' and the '. Coincidentally, "Yonder Racism" is an anagram of his name.

Unfortunately, his work and expertise in computer technology has been all but overshadowed by his batshit insane wingnut tendencies in the wake of 9/11, his misogynistic claims, and his increasingly wanky ego-gazing,  as he acknowledges that people aren't so crazy about him anymore.

Works
The Cathedral and the Bazaar is a widely influential essay explaining why it is critically important for software projects to be open to contributions from outsiders, and not restricted to a privileged in-group, as well as reforming Free Software Movement and abolishing 3 of the 4 freedoms by inventing and using the term open source for the first time. The essay also makes an economic case for so called open source software.

The Jargon File is a repository of hacker culture (in the wizard programmer sense, not the 1337 sense) that originated in the DEC PDP computer cultures of 1970s computer labs at universities like MIT and Stanford. For this reason he is listed, with Guy L. Steele, as the compiler of The New Hacker's Dictionary, a book reproducing the Jargon File, with Raymond's additions and changes, in text form. The latest version of the Jargon File was released in 2003, raising eyebrows for edits clearly aimed at bringing the dictionary in-line with Raymond's personal world-view.

Raymond is also known for writing an e-mail retrieval utility, fetchmail, which has drawn criticism for, among other things, containing many security vulnerabilities and for essentially abandoning it when it reached a point that he considered "finished." His experience in coding fetchmail features prominently in The Cathedral and the Bazaar. On and off since 1987 he has also maintained giflib, which is the thing that renders GIFs on pretty much everything with a screen, and GPSD, which is how pretty much anything running Linux (e.g., your Android phone) understands GPS data.

ESR may be seen at his near-best in his excellent book The Art Of Unix Programming, a good example of ESR when he knows what he's talking about, i.e., not politics or anything else outside his actual field of expertise. (Reviewed and approved of by famous Unix greybeards. This book is really good and if you program or administer Unix or Linux, you should read it.)

Open Source


Raymond helped popularize the Open Source movement and term partially out of frustration with the Free Software Foundation and its leading light, Richard Stallman. The difference is one of political style more than substance. Raymond's political and economic views are anarcho-libertarian and right-wing; Stallman's are green, left-progressive, and anti-corporate.

Open Source and Free Software are practically the same thing, but advocated from two different angles; Open Source attempted to separate the machinery of Free Software from its politics, so the likes of Raymond could participate in it without feeling any discomfort about consorting with those for whom Free Software had a "disagreeable" political motive.

It can be argued that the Open Source movement helped gain respectability for the Free Software movement. The Cathedral and the Bazaar popularized the aggressively collaborative development model that is now par for the course, but was originally started by Linus Torvalds, whom Stallman believes to be leading people astray from the True Path of Free Software. As we shall see, though, even to the extent that Raymond is right about technology, that makes him at best a stopped clock overall.

I am not a hard-right conservative but an anarchist who just happens to agree exactly with hard-right conservatives
Eric Raymond was one of those unfortunate souls who went completely nuts after 9/11. He has thus turned from a respected thinker with some good and some extreme ideas into a paranoid headcase, who sees Islamist and Communist conspiracies everywhere, and who is the perfect example of the ancient proverb stating that those whom the gods wish to destroy, they first make mad.

This self-proclaimed "anarchist" turned overnight into a nuke-the-Middle-East fanatic and began posting tedious manifestos such as "The Anti-Idiotarian Manifesto," proclaiming the duty of all good Americans to support George W. Bush and his transcendent crusade to crush "Islamofascism."

His political writings make most sense as the ravings of someone who believes that America is the greatest country in the world and that all other countries are run by little girls.

Idiotarian, n. Anyone who isn't a trigger-happy neocon/liberventionist
Raymond's "idiotarians" include consistent anti-war Libertarians (such as himself before 9/11), "idiotarians of the left" (the peace movement and antiwar Democrats), "idiotarians of the right" (conspiracy theorists and those like Jerry Falwell suggesting 9/11 was God's punishment of America), and anyone else not fully on board with invading Iraq. The term and concept quickly spread to pro-war bloggers, who have continued the tactic of lumping together the peace movement and antiwar Democrats and Libertarians with David Duke, Lyndon LaRouche, Fred Phelps, far-left Communist cults, 9/11 conspiracy theories, etc. as all being part of the same anti-war tent. This tactic is used to discredit the peace movement and mainstream opposition to the war. Thankfully nobody's buying it anymore.

Why is it that my tinfoil hat never seems to quite fit right?
He followed that up with some bizarre writings on race, homosexuality, and HIV denial. He also apparently endorses the rather discredited General Semantics of Alfred Korzybski, which has never been accepted by mainstream philosophy or psychology, and denies the existence of dark matter, to which a cosmologist can only say "Well, what do you think all that missing mass is?" which suggest he has come completely off his hinges.

He has suggested that Barack Obama's victory in the 2008 Presidential race was due to voter fraud and the mainstream media's ability to mask Obama's weaknesses. Never mind the fact that, in 2004, he himself stated that the mainstream media lost its power to sway elections. He also believes that just because it happens to be his blog, he can have the privilege of committing the grossest forms of logical fallacies without anyone having the right to call him on them and that all liberals lend support to the killing of "anyone who ever bought an SUV or voted Republican." He has also gone full circle and become a full-blown Internet troll when arguing in favor of gun rights, and believes that healthcare is not actually cheaper in countries with universal health care because "the numbers are being massively cooked" by "socialists."

In late 2009, he came out on the side of global warming denialists amid the controversy surrounding the leaking of email communications between climate scientists from the University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit; however, he never did comment when internal and UK government investigations cleared the CRU of both misconduct and bad science. One of the comments in said post makes it very obvious that ESR is the kind of person who will add 2 and 2 and come up with a Communist plot. (Really? KGB psyops? Have they been shooting their mind control beams at you, Eric?)

In early 2010, in the wake of Pat Robertson's ridiculous remarks regarding the Haitian people's supposed pact with Satan, ESR wrote a blog post suggesting that the Haitian people really did summon up the Voudon god Ogun to kill off all the white Frenchmen. Of course, his source is a stultifying right-wing conservative website, so who will you believe? (By the way, ESR describes himself as a neo-Pagan, though an atheistic one, and unlike Robertson does not condemn the Haitians for doing ritual magick to free themselves of an oppressor.)

In 2011 he proclaimed himself a "natural" at "game" (in other words, a born pick-up artist). Since he also describes himself as a natural polyglot, an expert martial artist, a natural small-unit leader, a natural flutist and "a natural witch, albeit of a kind uncommon in this century," a natural marksman who can "think like a warrior" and break safety rules which "civilians" blindly follow, and speaks with confidence about historical linguistics perhaps this claim should not be taken too seriously.

After the Trayvon Martin case was exposed in March 2012 and John Derbyshire weighed in with the bile that cost him his National Review job, Raymond went all-in on hardcore The Bell Curve-style "scientific" racism. Though he hotly denies that it is in fact racist, it's pretty much impossible to see him as anything other than a seethingly idiotic white supremacist at this point. And he believes Derbyshire isn't racist either; his self-proclamation as such was just irony.

... what’s keeping women in general from occupying the vast middle of the programming field is not general intelligence. On the other hand, the average black American has an IQ about 85 and that is pretty much a disqualifier right there. Only the cohort of their bell curve above 3 STDs from median has much hope of matching the capability of the average white programmer.

In November of 2015, ESR posted a claim that advocacy groups for women in computing were part of a conspiracy to make false rape accusations. Specifically, he claimed that people who were formerly in the Ada Initiative were trying to frame Linus Torvalds at technical conferences. As "evidence", he posted logs from an IRC conversation with an unidentified tipster. The tipster sounded equally paranoid and did not include any evidence himself. Apparently, blaming a subset of women for this alleged behaviour was not enough for him: "Don’t like that, ladies? Tough. You were just fine with collective guilt when the shoe was on the other foot. Enjoy your turn!" Raymond's rant was eaten up by some less than reputable reporters at Breitbart.

Biting the hand that feeds him (and quite a few others as well)
Raymond also blames Alan Turing for his judicial punishment and suicide, even though Raymond, like every other computer programmer, owes Turing his career. This in turn came up in the context of an article blaming a young woman for her suicide because she was a very individualistic person (an autistic tomboy who was often accused of being a lesbian); the logic was that Raymond himself, who grew up suffering from cerebral palsy, was strong enough to put up with teasing, so everyone else who dares be an individual should be strong enough to put up with it too. Make of that what you will.

His influence and involvement in Open Source advocacy has, needless to say, been greatly diminished and he is now best known as a notorious Internet crank, leaving Stallman Bruce Perens to fight the ninjas alone. He's somewhat aware of his reputation, but still found a curiously egomaniacal way to respond to the charges. The people currently running the Open Source Initiative are trying to politely exorcise his ghost.

My giant tinfoil hat will protect me from the Chinese Communist coronavirus!
He has proclaimed that there are three two reasons to be suspicious about the 2019-2020 coronavirus outbreak being a result of an accidental release of a bioweapon from a government laboratory in the Peoples' Republic of China. In a followup posting he cites a video of unknown provenance as evidence of disaster and statistics of unkown provenance as support for his accidental bioweapon leak idea. He assumes that the video is related to the coronavirus despite not having medical qualifications.

Science
Raymond's attitude towards science and technology isn't much better. Though he fancies himself a rationalist, Raymond has a history of latching on to things that appeal to him and defending them beyond any sense of reason. His advocacy of Linux proved both prescient and influential; the spread of Linux as a major operating system (particularly in IT centers as the core of the LAMP webserver stack and as a royalty-free platform for embedded hardware development) is a major example, giving Linux a very strong market niche outside hobbyist circles and giving it respectability as a professional platform.

However, Raymond either got a swelled head from this, or had severe flaws in his reasoning from the beginning; in his presentation of the Halloween Documents, a series of internal documents laying out Microsoft's internal strategy to deal with Linux's rise in popularity, Raymond predicted Windows 2000 would be an expensive failure, and claimed credit for a successful prediction in later edits; in actual fact, Win2K was only marketed on a consumer basis by Sony, but was still considered a capable follow-on to NT4. (Though his description of what a car crash 2000 would be fit the real disaster, Vista, marvelously. Seven years late.) Raymond is also an Android fanboi and has been recently spotted making similarly over-the-top predictions of the iPhone falling into irrelevance, going so far as to quote mine job listings to "prove" that Apple's phone developers are technically incompetent and lying to the public about the quality of their hardware. Any evidence to the contrary is the work of shills.

Climategate
During the Climategate fiasco, Raymond's ability to read other peoples' source code (or at least his honesty about it) was called into question when he was caught quote-mining analysis software written by the CRU researchers, presenting a commented-out section of source code used for analyzing counterfactuals as evidence of deliberate data manipulation. When confronted with the fact that scientists as a general rule are scrupulously honest, Raymond claimed it was a case of an "error cascade," a concept that makes sense in computer science and other places where all data goes through a single potential failure point, but in areas where outside data and multiple lines of evidence are used for verification, doesn't entirely make sense. (He was curiously silent when all the researchers involved were exonerated of scientific misconduct.)