It seems like the Linux user (and possibly the Soviet citizen example, but I’m not sure) is… in a broader category than the equal treatment fallacy, because homosexuality and poverty are things one can’t change (or, at least, that’s the assumption on which criticizing the equal treatment fallacy is based).
Although, I suppose my interpretation may have been different from the intended one- as I read it as “the OSX user has the freedom to switch to Linux and modify the source code of Linux”, i.e. both the Linux and OSX user has the choice of either OS. Obviously the freedom to modify Linux and keep using OSX would be the equal treatment fallacy.
It seems like the Linux user (and possibly the Soviet citizen example, but I’m not sure) is… in a broader category than the equal treatment fallacy, because homosexuality and poverty are things one can’t change (or, at least, that’s the assumption on which criticizing the equal treatment fallacy is based).
Although, I suppose my interpretation may have been different from the intended one- as I read it as “the OSX user has the freedom to switch to Linux and modify the source code of Linux”, i.e. both the Linux and OSX user has the choice of either OS. Obviously the freedom to modify Linux and keep using OSX would be the equal treatment fallacy.