[edited to delete -- sorry, confused.]
Bureaucracy 1: Like Kafka, Only Funnier
A thread to discuss naming threads, board policy, new thread suggestions, and anything else that has to do with board administration and maintenance. Guaranteed to include lively debate and polls. Natter discouraged, but not deleted.
Current Stompy Feet: ita, Jon B, DXMachina, P.M. Marcontell, Liese S., amych
I'd like to see it a bit more moderated/stomped than the other threads, if not as much so as Press and Beep Me
Agreed. I also think that the thread should be kept closed unless there is something up for discussion.
Sophia, I think we have to agree on the idea of a Supreme Court and debate thread first.
True, true.
So the options are:
1) Keep decision making the same, by trying to get consensus
2) Vote on things proposed in Bureacracy
3) Vote on things proposed in Bureacracy, but discussed in another thread created for that purpose.
Are these the only options?
My actual point was that someone might propose something, we talk about it, and end up with a differant idea. I think we should be open to it.
I think the admins can get a report of addresses, but only for people with their addresses in their profile, maybe? DX? ita?
The admins can see all the e-mail addresses, hidden or not.
Proposal - the Supreme Court thread (which I think I liked but disremember) is probably something that needs more discussion. I'd like to see us set that aside for now. Let's get a simple decision making model in place, first. Then discuss and decide on the Supreme Court thread. I think it has enough formality to it that some people will oppose it and we might get so bogged down, that we'll never even be able to decide on a thread name again.
A variation on DX's idea that would be easier to tally -- create two email addresses, voteyes@buffistas.org and voteno@buffistas.org. We only vote on one issue at a time. That way, all Jesse has to do is look at how many new messages are in each box (deleting duplicates, if necessary).
OK-- so we are deciding
To vote or not to vote?
And how? (I actually think that we can't discuss how without discussing a separate thread).
You could include two e-mail links in the proposal, one for yay, and one for nay, and set up the links so they automatically fill in the subject line.
That doesn't work for all browser/e-mail clients, FWIW (especially people with web-based e-mail). Also, 48 hours lets things get lost on a weekend.
Polls will be implemented. An e-mail form can be implemented. But I think the effort to send an e-mail is little enough that those who care, can do it.
1) Keep decision making the same, by trying to get consensus
Sometimes I feel like we don't get consensus so much as we decide which ever group spoke last, gets to make the decision. Usually this only occurs to me when an idea I've liked has been shot down, so I've never mentioned it, because I thought it might just be sour grapes on my part. However there have been a few times that an idea has gotten support early on, then the anti-idea people have spoken, and we just assume there were more anti- than pro-.