Seems like everyone's got a tale to tell.

Mal ,'Safe'


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


Sophia Brooks - Mar 03, 2003 2:45:43 pm PST #6286 of 10001
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

If that's true, would you say the same if there were 5 choices and the "winner" received 22%?

The definition of majority is "over 50%". "Most votes" is a plurality.

I know this intellectually. but I am wondering if people were sure of this when they voted for simple majority? Anyone else?


Cindy - Mar 03, 2003 2:47:33 pm PST #6287 of 10001
Nobody

John - in the example I gave, there is no preference.

But still, even with preferential, if I only vote my number one choice, aren't I doing it more of a favor than if ...

(this is too mathy for me, let me try again)

Okay say the choices are: Kafka, Whedon and Monkey.

I like Whedon best. I like Kafka second best.

I HATE monkey.

If I rank Whedon as preference number 1, he gets what? Like 3 points. If I rank Kafka second he gets 2 points. If I rank monkey third, he gets a point.

Wouldn't it be smarter for me to give my 3 points only to Whedon, since Whedon is actually running against Kafka and monkey and I don't want them to get any points? Or at least, to only rank Whedon and Kafka, so that monkey gets no points?


Jon B. - Mar 03, 2003 2:47:35 pm PST #6288 of 10001
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

And what if it's 15% Cheeseheads and 10% Monkeymeat?

We're splitting up the second choices of those whose first choice was Cheese, so 15% wouldn't still be Cheese.

Maybe you meant 15% Kafka and 10% Monkey?

Then it's a tie and we have co-mascots. It's the same as if there were a runoff and there was a tie. The preferential ballot just saves us the time required to set-up, vote on, and tabulate a whole other ballot.


Dana - Mar 03, 2003 2:48:17 pm PST #6289 of 10001
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

I know this intellectually. but I am wondering if people were sure of this when they voted for simple majority? Anyone else?

It's the same way the thread-naming used to work, when we did polls for that.


Cindy - Mar 03, 2003 2:49:51 pm PST #6290 of 10001
Nobody

I know this intellectually. but I am wondering if people were sure of this when they voted for simple majority? Anyone else?

Me. I would have worded it more simply in the proposal as "most votes" and not 50%+1.


Jon B. - Mar 03, 2003 2:50:00 pm PST #6291 of 10001
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

There are no "points" Cindy. Your second choice doesn't even get looked at unless your first choice is eliminated. Was my example unclear? (not snarky; I'm really trying to explain so everyone understands and buys into it)


DavidS - Mar 03, 2003 2:50:24 pm PST #6292 of 10001
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

And this seems in conflict with the spirit (although it may fall within the letter) of chosing simple majority. But maybe that's me. Doesn't it, though?

Can we talk about this for a second? I'm against preferential voting. Even though there are obvious advantages to doing it.

There is, however, a large disadvantage and I'm just going to keep pointing this out. It's more complicated. Buffistas are not going to be comfortable with complicated, mathy, bureaucratic solutions to what are - in essence - basic administrative details. There are a number of unlikely scenarios where simple majority will be insufficient. There are fine issues of fairness intrinsic to the way the vote is structured.

But simple majority is Good Enough. I am a big proponent of Good Enough. It's a whole philosophy of parenting that involves not stressing about whether little Willow is on the Harvard waiting list before third grade. You keep the kid alive, love them and give them some boundaries. Everything else is gravy.

I want to push for people keeping Good Enough in mind. At any point where we can make it simpler - that is a huge positive value for this community. To misapply Occam's Razor, the simplest solution is the one that is most likely going to be the right one for us.

I think we need to establish a few more basic procedural elements: (a) minimum voter turnout(b) separate board for vote discussions (c) if we do the separate board, what process opens that board (Seconding) (d) closing discussions, time limits.

I am very mindful that people want a few things settled to make the board run better. We are going to have problems if this gets too complicated. I think there will be serious issues of resistance and some feeling to scrap it all. I am arguing for those few things that we need settled to be simple and somewhat intuitive. That I am willing to sacrifice a sophisticated processes that guarantee greater fairness, or expressing the true will of the voter, as long as the process is mostly fair, and will be Good Enough.

If we don't keep it simple, we're going to wind up with nothing at all.


§ ita § - Mar 03, 2003 2:50:53 pm PST #6293 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

To be honest, I did vote for a simple majority. Sure, we have to work out a tiebreaker, but I was voting AGAINST stuff like this.

Yikes.


jengod - Mar 03, 2003 2:52:35 pm PST #6294 of 10001

Uh-huh. Yes. I agree. Word. Hell yeah. Wrod. Listen to the man. Preach it, brother. Amen! Yep. Boy howdy. True dat. And, to sum up, what Hec said.

!!!


John H - Mar 03, 2003 2:52:55 pm PST #6295 of 10001

If I rank Whedon as preference number 1, he gets what? Like 3 points. If I rank Kafka second he gets 2 points. If I rank monkey third, he gets a point.

There are no points in this system.

There are only votes.

Whedon as preference number one means "a vote for Whedon in the first, and hopefully only, round of counting, where that math is still within John H's grasp".

A vote for Kafka as two means "oh really? Whedon might not win? What's wrong with you people? But if it comes to that, I vote for Monkey in the second round of counting".