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Without commenting on anything else here:

> “Rust Evangelism Strike Force” was never meant to be pejorative, and “Rewrite it in Rust” was never meant to be a joke

Maybe it's just been such a long time, but my recollection was exactly that: both of these terms were invented by outsiders intending to denigrate the Rust community, and became jokes inside the community as a means of recuperating them.

Okay, I will mention one other thing here:

> This article doesn’t mention Rust (that I noticed) and Go is still being measured up to Rust in the comments.

I agree with this in 99.999% of threads, this happens all the time, and probably shouldn't. However, in this thread in particular with the way that the Go package management story developed, including all of the drama there, I don't think it's surprising that Rust/Cargo get mentioned in comparison.



I won’t comment on Rust Evangelism Strike Force too much; it seemed to be unironically used as a term of endearment at some point, but that could’ve been after its use as a pejorative. At this point, I can’t remember, and frankly, the world is probably better off forgetting.

I understand. In the earlier days of Go package management, it was pretty common for folks to compare it to Cargo. In retrospect, this was probably bad, but it did serve to highlight some pretty damning issues with Go at the time. But I feel they addressed the shortcomings significantly with Go modules, and now it has become much more a matter of taste.

I enjoy Go’s idea of trying to make source control the only source of truth, but I don’t think it’s as well-received as the more tried-and-true approach of Cargo and other centralized package repositories. I suppose time will tell.




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