Ultimately, this reflects just terribly on the Scala community and every individual who signed the open letter, including Brian Clapper himself and over 300 others. You can read the full list of names here: https://scala-open-letter.github.io/

Having been in a similar situation myself as a teenager, it is truly abhorrent how quickly people are willing to jump to conclusions against someone based on the most limited information, and without giving the accused any chance to tell their side of the story or defend themselves. Not even a single one of my so-called friends asked me what happened, and almost all of them disappeared from my life permanently.

What I learned from the experience was that none of the people who jumped on the cancel bandwagon had ever been worth even a second of my time. It was their loss, and I became much more careful about who I choose as friends after that.

I can certainly say that if I encounter any of the 300+ individuals listed in the letter in my personal or professional lives, I will be giving them a very wide berth indeed.

That's just how people are. Most people are weak sheep and lack integrity. Milgram experiments proved it.

> Ultimately, this reflects just terribly on the Scala community

Maybe the lesson of this is that people should be cautious about getting involved in communities like this to the extent that being cancelled by the community does you this much damage.

Absolutely, and to be clear, "this much damage" could have happened to anyone.