No, it's shiny! I like to meet new people. They've all got stories...

Kaylee ,'Serenity'


Voting Discussion: We're Screwing In Light Bulbs AIFG!  

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!


Betsy HP - Mar 21, 2003 11:09:50 am PST #142 of 10289
If I only had a brain...

I'm with Sophia. The method for breaking a moratorium should be old-style consensus.

TBut they're afraid that if M.E. makes a show about Nutty's Butt they'd be locked into not having a thread about it for the 6 month period so they vote 3 month when they really want 6.

It seems to me that these two premises are incompatible. Either you think that six months is the proper period to delay reconsideration, or you think three months is. If you are worried that there might be a good reason to reconsider before six months elapses, you should be voting for three months.


Sophia Brooks - Mar 21, 2003 11:11:39 am PST #143 of 10289
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

Those 2 sentances are not mutually exclusive if I elaborate a bit.

I don't think we can talk about putting a list of "WHAT CONSTITUTES A CHANGE OF STATUS" on a ballot. We can never come up with all of the possible situations.

We will have to take it on a case by case basis, and we cannot vote on whether or not to allow a vote-- becuase I saythat is ridiculous. Therefore, the only way to decide an emergancy circumstance (Mutant Enemy starts producing a show about Nutty's Cheese Butt) is to form a consensus when that in fact happens.


Betsy HP - Mar 21, 2003 11:12:18 am PST #144 of 10289
If I only had a brain...

I feel that Nutty's Butt is getting overexposed in this thread.

Nutty, pull your pants up!


DavidS - Mar 21, 2003 11:15:22 am PST #145 of 10289
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Nutty, pull your pants up!

I vote in the contrary!


Jesse - Mar 21, 2003 11:17:01 am PST #146 of 10289
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

(I just feel the need to mention that silly hypotheticals are one of my very favorite Buffista things. But that I would vote NO to the Nutty's Butt thread no matter how many times it comes up.)


Java cat - Mar 21, 2003 11:17:41 am PST #147 of 10289
Not javachik

With all due respect, I'd like to make a motion that 4 months be considered. I believe that Rebecca L and Lyra Jane have informally seconded it. Anyone else?

If it has to be narrowed down to 2 choices, then between 4 months and 6 months.

3 months is too soon, 1 year is too long, and likewise, I think 6 months is also too long. 4 months = 3x/year possible discussion.

24 hours to get seconds? Everyone agreeing that this appropriate has a home computer with unlimited access day or night. IJS. Not all of us do. If I have a busy Friday and Monday at work, with no home computer, I could be absent for 4-5 days. If you're on all the time, that can seem like an eternity, but it really isn't IRL.

OTOH, I don't expect that this should be designed to work around me, but do want to voice my experience/set of circumstances as representative of at least one person here.

And, how about all the people off on vacation this week? For example.

Wasn't some of this designed to make it less everyone-who's-on-right-now-gets-to-decide-everything?

And now I have to work for the next several hours, so, later.


Lyra Jane - Mar 21, 2003 11:27:10 am PST #148 of 10289
Up with the sun

3 months is too soon, 1 year is too long, and likewise, I think 6 months is also too long. 4 months = 3x/year possible discussion.

This is my position as well.

As for how much time people should have to get seconds ... why do we need a time limit? I would bet that most issues will get seconds with in a matter of minutes to hours. But if something doesn't, for whatever reasons, and three weeks later someone comes up with a fourth, I see no reason why their second should be invalid.

(BTW, if something is proposed and fails to get enough seconds, does it move to the list of Forbidden Topics, or can they bring it up again the next day?)


Kat - Mar 21, 2003 11:28:16 am PST #149 of 10289
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

Language about "extraordinary circumstances"

How would we decide what constitutes extraordinary circumstances? Cause, I have a pretty high tolerance for things that are out of the ordinary that don't qualify as extraordinary.


Wolfram - Mar 21, 2003 11:29:37 am PST #150 of 10289
Visilurking

I don't think we can talk about putting a list of "WHAT CONSTITUTES A CHANGE OF STATUS" on a ballot. We can never come up with all of the possible situations.

Ack, that would be a nightmare. But my proposal was a method to decide what constitutes a change of status. I'm afraid if we leave it to old style consensus then the moratorium won't be strong enough, because a simple old style consensus would break it. Since the moratorium should be practically ironclad we should have a formal and almost insurmountable method to break it, like a supermajority vote.


Hil R. - Mar 21, 2003 11:30:17 am PST #151 of 10289
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

I agree with

As for how much time people should have to get seconds ... why do we need a time limit? I would bet that most issues will get seconds with in a matter of minutes to hours. But if something doesn't, for whatever reasons, and three weeks later someone comes up with a fourth, I see no reason why their second should be invalid.

In order to deal with the problem of

(BTW, if something is proposed and fails to get enough seconds, does it move to the list of Forbidden Topics, or can they bring it up again the next day?)

So once something's been proposed, it's been proposed, and if it doesn't get seconds immediately, it can just sit around for awhile until either someone decides to second it or people forget about it. That way, there won't be a need to keep reproposing something.