Historically one of the most heated flame-wars in the Scheme
community.  We have to decide whether we want to preserve backwards
compatibility with standards up through the R5RS, or reaffirm the
switch to case-sensitivity in the R6RS.  The charter gives precedence
to the former, so unless we can reach a rough consensus (> 90%) to the
contrary, the default should remain case-insensitive.
      Whatever we choose we should realize that some implementations are likely
to use a different default in their preferred environments.
      Note that the default case-sensitivity is orthogonal to the issue of
whether and how behavior can be toggled on a per-file or
per-expression basis.  If there is a toggle, it may be specified by
WG1 for both groups, or only by WG2.
      Below are some common arguments for each side.
      Pro-folding:
      
        - R[0-5]RS and IEEE Scheme compatible
 
        - code from R5RS and before continues to work
 
        - possibly easier for beginners not expecting case distinctions to be significant
 
        - allows using different cases as stylistic differences in source
 
        - prevents using separate identifiers which differ only in case
 
        - less confusion when code is read aloud, e.g. variable names
 
      Pro-preserving:
      
        - R6RS compatible
 
        - the popular default in a number of modern implementations
 
        - easier compatibility with external data (XML, some filesystems, FFIs)
 
        - users from other languages usually expect case sensitivity
 
        - using different cases for the same identifier can be confusing
 
        - transliterations of math formulae may be easier to read with case distinctions
 
        - more general - can write a (begin/ci ...) macro to implement the alternative
 
        - allows using separate identifiers which differ only in case (e.g., capitalizing a class but not an instance)
 
        - simpler to implement in the presence of complex character sets