Giles: Stop that, you two. Riley: He started it... Xander: He called me a bad name! I think it was bad; it might have been Latin.

'Selfless'


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


billytea - Mar 09, 2003 11:33:14 pm PST #6993 of 10001
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

Here's a stab at a more complex example of preferential voting:

Jon, this is a nice piece of work. Two possible suggestions:

1. Maybe there should be a short summary of preferential voting at the top.

2. Though voting on a quorum is the example being bandied about right now for multiple-option voting, maybe your example would benefit from replacing the numbers with A, B, C, D and E. I was momentarily confused as to whether the numbers stood for the numbers of votes cast for particular options.


Laura - Mar 10, 2003 5:28:10 am PST #6994 of 10001
Our wings are not tired.

But let's say we have three choices where the vote splits as follows - Change1 28%, Change2 32%, and NoChange 40%. Now let's say everyone who voted for Change1 would prefer Change2 over NoChange, and everyone who voted for Change2 would prefer Change1 over NoChange. What we have is a clear majority of folks who want change but aren't getting it. Is that fair?

Which is why

I'm with those who say we need to choose our method depending on the specific question being voted on.

I barely have to type at all.


Sophia Brooks - Mar 10, 2003 5:39:22 am PST #6995 of 10001
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

OK-- I was on crack last night.

So, is there anyone here against trying preferential voting this one time?

Also (and I really don't want to stir up a can of worms), have we consensed on having voting on something mean that the subject is not to be voted on for 6 months after? Because people are talking like it is a done dea, which is fine with me, but it hasn't actually come up for vote.


Jon B. - Mar 10, 2003 5:49:06 am PST #6996 of 10001
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

1. Maybe there should be a short summary of preferential voting at the top.

Agreed. I want to write a summary at the end too, comparing to a separate runoff election.

maybe your example would benefit from replacing the numbers with A, B, C, D and E

I did that because I wanted to show that there would be times when it would be almost mindless to rank your choices. i.e., if your first choice is the highest one (50), then clearly your second choice would be the second highest (40). I tried using 100 through 500 as choices but the tables looked too cluttered.


Anathema - Mar 10, 2003 7:20:10 am PST #6997 of 10001
Jonathan Will Always Be My Hero

Thread-naming does not need the Big Buffista Decision Procedure.

Not even sure which post I copied the above from, but I would like to say that even though I agree with it, and would vote for it, the trouble with opening up this voting procedure, I think, is that none of us has the authority to decide what does or doesn't need to be voted upon on our own. I don't think thread naming needs to be put to a vote, and, in fact, I think it would be a giant pain in the ass if each thread needed to be voted upon before it could be opened.

But now that we are voting, don't we need to have a vote to see if the will of the board is for or against voting on thread names? Or do a handful here have the power to decide whether or not an issue even gets to a vote?

Also, am I wrong or are the two major options for getting a 50% majority on issues with multiple choices either preferential voting or runoffs? If there are only two choices, why not just put them up for a vote before we get into another of those endless circular discussions?

Oh, and I can't believe I'm actually doing this all again. Now I must go pray my head does not explode.


Sophia Brooks - Mar 10, 2003 7:22:43 am PST #6998 of 10001
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

Anathema, I think that it was already decided that we would do the thread naming the same way as always before we voted to vote. I think that was inherant in the 'voting on big decisions' thing.


Hil R. - Mar 10, 2003 7:23:36 am PST #6999 of 10001
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

Also, am I wrong or are the two major options for getting a 50% majority on issues with multiple choices either preferential voting or runoffs? If there are only two choices, why not just put them up for a vote before we get into another of those endless circular discussions?

No, there are three choices. There's preferential voting, runoffs (which are really just two different ways of doing the same thing), or saying that if no choice gets 50%, there's no change made.

But now that we are voting, don't we need to have a vote to see if the will of the board is for or against voting on thread names?

One of the premises of the initial vote was that this procedure would not be used for thread names. If someone wanted to change that, we could discuss it at some point, but it's not something we have to decide now.


Lyra Jane - Mar 10, 2003 7:23:43 am PST #7000 of 10001
Up with the sun

I think thread naming was specifically excluded from things to vote on through the original ballot.


Am-Chau Yarkona - Mar 10, 2003 7:24:07 am PST #7001 of 10001
I bop to Wittgenstein. -- Nutty

am I wrong or are the two major options for getting a 50% majority on issues with multiple choices either preferential voting or runoffs? If there are only two choices, why not just put them up for a vote before we get into another of those endless circular discussions?

I suspect you're right.

Edit: I think you're right we should vote-- on the three choices (see Hil's post above).

t head unexplody vibes


Cindy - Mar 10, 2003 7:31:06 am PST #7002 of 10001
Nobody

No Anathema - thread naming was specifically excluded when we put voting up for a vote.

If someone wants us to actually vote on thread naming, they'd have to propose a vote on that. But it was specifically excluded from the outset. This is a big-decisions process.