On Tue, 21 Sept 2021 at 17:48, Paul Eggert via tz <tz@iana.org> wrote:
This disagreement is not about whether the data in question are available; it's only about which file they're in. Nothing is being "wiped out" or refused.
It is about more than that. The current unreleased state of tzdb is that it favours some countries over others, such as Germany over Sweden/Norway. It does this to a much greater extent than before. From my perspective, that is the root of the problem here.
I think this greatly underestimate the effort to do a complete job. We'd eventually need thousands of Zones.
I would imagine that most readers of this list would not want thousands of zones. The goal of including every time-zone that has ever been is a straw man. I'm perfectly happy with the post-1970 rule for determining what IDs we have so long as it results in one ID per ISO country. In addition, at least one ID per ISO country is entitled to have full history back to LMT, **even if it is innaccurate**.
[I] am UCLA teaching professor who has institutional obligations in the areas of equity, diversity and inclusion ... merely going back to 2021a's setup is not something we can or should do, on equity grounds.
The patch makes the equity/diversity/inclusion position of tzdb far, far worse. Appreciating this is the first step necessary to resolving this. Stephen