(Headline article below) I made a comment about the propagandistic angle of the reporting via tech news on Enrico Weigelt and XLibre, the X11 fork, and then this ridiculous piece pops up.
This vulture is conflicted. We deplore anti-vaxxer and other anti-science disinformation. Vaccines don’t cause autism; they cause adults. Climate change is real, social justice is a good thing, and we are enthusiastically in favor of diversity, equity, and inclusion.
It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see the heavy metals in vaccines alone explain why the autism rates have increased so high, not to mention SIDS, Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, which they refuse to look into being caused by the insane vaccine schedule. Little babies can’t take the toxic exposure not to mention other ingredients… Consequently, I could make rational arguments against all these assertions.
So let’s look at Enrico’s comment about the mRNA death shot that Linus rebuked him for.
I know *a lot* of people who will never take part in this generic [genetic] human experiment that basically creates a new humanoid race (people who generate and exhaust the toxic spike protein, whose gene sequence doesn’t look quote [quite] natural). I’m one of them, as my whole family.
And Linus’ reply.
“Please keep your insane and technically incorrect anti-vax comments to yourself.”
“You don’t know what you are talking about, you don’t know what mRNA is, and you’re spreading idiotic lies,” Torvalds’ post continues. “Maybe you do so unwittingly, because of bad education. Maybe you do so because you’ve talked to ‘experts’ or watched youtube videos by charlatans that don’t know what they are talking about.
“But dammit, regardless of where you have gotten your mis-information from, any Linux kernel discussion list isn’t going to have your idiotic drivel pass uncontested from me.”
“And if you insist on believing in the crazy conspiracy theories, at least SHUT THE HELL UP about it on Linux kernel discussion lists.”
Sometimes Linus is a tool, and aside from the Linux kernel, someone whose opinion I’m not interested in. And idiotic is personal attacks and name calling, but what you get with the left. They didn’t really give the reason for the initial comment in the mailing list, but it appears to be a response to someone. And as the years have passed, who was shown to be more coherent about the mRNA gene therapy. And Enrico was onto the problem, making your body the factory of toxic spike proteins was a horrendous idea, and we’ve learned there are all kinds of garbage DNA and RNA fragments left over from manufacturing. Oh, and it didn’t work or fulfill any of their claims they made, but you did run the risk of myocarditus, pericarditus, neurological issues, turbo cancers, VAIDS, SADS…
I also looked into the patch submission and comments from Enrico, as a particular patch had a problem that was quickly fixed, but we learned Enrico was working on this in his free time and I found his comments and English well reasoned. And from looking into these, I’m liking Enrico Weigelt even more. I can’t wait to start using XLibre when they have a full release, and hopefully Linux distributions will use it over Xorg’s X11 that Red Hat and IBM are trying to destroy. And you have to love opensource and free software, as the megacorps can go too far in taking over a project, and it can be forked by the community wasting the megacorp’s money and reputation in the process.
https://www.theregister.com/2025/06/10/xlibre_new_xorg_fork/
Project to modernize the X.org X11 server seems to actively court controversy
By Liam Proven
The recently released Xlibre server aims to modernize the X.org X11 server and improve both its security and performance.
The XLibre Xserver is a fork of the X.org X server, started by long-term X.org maintainer Enrico Weigelt. The project aims to develop and improve the X.org display server, as an alternative to the newer and more fashionable Wayland display protocol.
We last mentioned Weigelt’s work on improving X.org multimonitor support about a year ago. However, this was not his first appearance in the pages of The Register – back in 2021, Linus Torvalds rebuked him for spreading pseudo-scientific, anti-vaccination claims.
We suspect that such views will in fact appeal to some people, even if they are on the fringe of the FOSS world.
It is fair to say that Weigelt is no stranger to controversy, and this announcement is no different. The Reg FOSS desk has witnessed some remarkable levels of anti-X11 sentiment from Wayland proponents since the announcement… especially given that the subject under discussion is something as superficially trivial as the protocols that handle displaying Unix computers’ graphical user interfaces. But, as we noted last month, ferociously passionate advocacy is a sad but inevitable aspect of software development.
We are confident this won’t bother Weigelt a bit. In fact, the README file for X11Libre positively invites it, as it contains this:
It’s explicitly free of any “DEI” [diversity, equity, and inclusion] or similar discriminatory policies.
Oh dear.
That statement, though, has received praise and approval in some places.
The same README states that the fork is a result of systematic attempts to suppress further development and improvement of the default FOSS X11 server:
That fork was necessary since toxic elements within Xorg projects, moles from BigTech, are boycotting any substantial work on Xorg, in order to destroy the project, to elimitate [sic] competition of their own products. Classic “embrace, extend, extinguish” tactics.
Right after first journalists began covering the planned fork Xlibre, on June 6th 2025, Redhat [sic] employees started a purge on the Xlibre founder’s gitlab account on freedesktop.org: deleted the git repo, tickets, merge requests, etc, and so fired the shot that the whole world heared [sic].
Weigelt amplified these claims in an email to the xorg-devel mailing list. As far as we are able to see, the statement that his GitLab accounts have been deleted is true – for instance, this merge request says: “The source project of this merge request has been removed.” His Freedesktop GitLab account now just says “This user is blocked” and most of his long list of merge requests have been summarily marked “closed.”
His direct code contributions have faced pushback before as well. For instance, some of the comments on this change.
This vulture is conflicted. We deplore anti-vaxxer and other anti-science disinformation. Vaccines don’t cause autism; they cause adults. Climate change is real, social justice is a good thing, and we are enthusiastically in favor of diversity, equity, and inclusion.
Thus we find it deeply ironic that at present, X11 is considerably better from an accessibility point of view than Wayland, which has a markedly poor track record here. As we have said recently, accessibility matters. Even if you’re not disabled yet, you will be one day. Today, the desktops and apps that are most controllable by stodgy old-fashioned keyboard-centric user interfaces are ones like MATE and Xfce – which also means that it is the less-cool, older-style desktops that are more accessible. The environments driving Wayland adoption, such as GNOME and KDE Plasma, are still relatively weak in this area.
Wayland and the environments that natively support it boast some snazzy features such as adaptive sync and variable refresh rate support and High Dynamic Range displays, which we are sure are wonderful if you’re a keen-eyed gamer in your 20s or 30s. This author is not, and despite 20:20 vision with glasses, is physically unable to perceive this sort of thing. That is one reason why we strongly prefer older desktops such as Xfce and Ubuntu’s Unity, which also respects and follows the industry-standard user interface shunned by recent versions of GNOME and KDE.
As we have said before, we suspect this disconnect between younger, keener developers who don’t know or care about late 20th century user interface standards or accessibility concerns, but who strongly want to junk what they perceive as legacy baggage, are behind the moves to deprecate and remove X11 – which is very much still going ahead.
The X.org X11 server itself began as a fork of XFree86, as The Register reported in 2004. Perhaps it’s time it happened again. ®