but, Gandalfe, it was what they chose to do, and perfectly legitimate.
I didn't do that, but I'm pretty glad now they did, frankly. Unless we vote in a recall system, I can't change my vote, but I think I would on some things.
We open it up, we talks the talk, we votes, we shuts it down. This thread is to free up Bureaucracy for daily details as we hammer out the Big Issues towards a vote. Open only when a proposal has been made and seconded according to Buffista policy (Which we voted on!). If this thread is closed, hie thee to Bureaucracy instead!
but, Gandalfe, it was what they chose to do, and perfectly legitimate.
I didn't do that, but I'm pretty glad now they did, frankly. Unless we vote in a recall system, I can't change my vote, but I think I would on some things.
This bugs me, because, well, I didn't. And I'm not placing blame on anyone, 'cuz what you did worked (and, oddly, gave me the results I wanted, too. I think.)
See? It's not about being right or voting your conscience. It's about trusting that the system will produce the proper results.
That's why we're all working so hard and working each other's nerves - to get that kind of process in place. One that we have a modicum of trust in.
what are we going to do if someone brings up one of the verboten subjects? Ban them? Have someone follow them around and monitor all of their posts?
I want to help with the chilling with text analysis and hypothetical situations.
That second rhetorical question about monitoring is good context for taking the first one unseriously. Rather than suggesting we're the kind of people who would ban for that, it treats the idea as silly, something way too strict that we would never do. If you try to imagine this post having John H's username attached to it, wouldn't it look more like devil's advocacy, and not offensive at all?
That was a logic-based approach to chilling, which isn't how it's done, but I thought I'd try to win people over to my view of Gandalfe's post, 'cause to me it was another of his good points made in a constructive fashion.
Sorry, sorry, on-topic. Three months is good for vote losers or vote switchers. Six months is good for vote winners. Vote winners already have it pretty good. Don't make the vote losers suffer through six months of the wrong wrong wrong! decision -- that's longer than any college semester where you had a bad roommate or took a bad class. Frustration feels like eternity. Give the vote losers something to look forward to. Three months.
Sorry, Nou -- it was the logic that killed me. I don't think I'd appreciate it no matter who posted it, but, I'm thinking if you're right (and you probably are) then it's because I tend to use the fluffy bunny hug it to death approach than the logic based one. Logic is so mathy.
6 months. So if we really want 6 months, then I want to see 9 months on the ballot so we end up with 6 months.
When I proposed I also Proposed that we narrow to 2 choices. We don't have to, but it would be hella easier. It seems like we can consense on 2 numbers
I wanted to second to be 4, so I voted for 1. I wanted the maximum voter turnout to be 25, so I voted for 40. In the second case, I misguessed the way people would vote.
If you try to imagine this post having John H's username attached to it, wouldn't it look more like devil's advocacy, and not offensive at all?
Nah, I'd snarl at him, too.
No one is exempt.
I go with 3 months and 6 months.
I would like to point out that the purpose of this thread is to discuss the current issue about to be voting on (i.e. 3, 6, or 12 months), and nothing else. Thank you.
I would also like to point out that we don't have to sustain a discussion for 4 days. We can just be quite for 4 of them, and let people who had some days off read through the (small) discussion.
I like three months. Six is a very long time. I only got married six months ago. Four might be best, though -- an issue would only come up three tmes a year, but it's not an eternity.
And yes, there should be an "extraordinary circumstances" clause in the final language voted on.