I can handle the Oz Full Monty. I mean, not 'handle' handle.

Xander ,'Help'


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 23, 2003 3:50:50 pm PST #303 of 10289
If I only had a brain...

I like Burrell's suggestion a lot. Put up 3, 4, and 6 and let them fight it out.

We all know 6 will win anyway.


Wolfram - Mar 23, 2003 3:55:39 pm PST #304 of 10289
Visilurking

Yeah, 6 is the sh*t.

Let's put up 6, 4 and 3, and if in the extremely unlikely event that 6 doesn't get 51% of the vote, then we fight out what to do.


brenda m - Mar 23, 2003 4:10:19 pm PST #305 of 10289
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

Here's a thought:

Let 6, 4, and 3 duke it out. Include preferences on the ballot, but (for now) count only first choices. If there is no majority, hold an old-fashioned run-off, then compare the result with what preferential tallying on the first ballot would have resulted in.

I'm only half kidding.


Betsy HP - Mar 23, 2003 4:19:21 pm PST #306 of 10289
If I only had a brain...

54' 40" or fight!


Jon B. - Mar 23, 2003 4:20:00 pm PST #307 of 10289
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

bwaaa!, Brenda.


Sophia Brooks - Mar 23, 2003 5:13:32 pm PST #308 of 10289
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

Brenda-- I think this might be a good thought-- a test, if you will of peoples willingness to do preferential balloting without actually committing to it. Also, isn't this supposed to go to vote tomorrow?

If so, we need more wording and a form and such.


RobertH - Mar 23, 2003 5:54:23 pm PST #309 of 10289
Disaffected college student

25 or 6 to 4.


Betsy HP - Mar 23, 2003 5:56:27 pm PST #310 of 10289
If I only had a brain...

In the year 2929...


askye - Mar 23, 2003 6:10:15 pm PST #311 of 10289
Thrive to spite them

I'm one of those non math savvy people, I try very hard not to say "Math is hard" because I don't want to sound like the stupid Barbie. But often don't get math. However, I do understand preferential voting and it doesn't seem especially mathy to me.

I haven't been sure how this discussion of the voting issue would go, it's been interesting to watch, I've decided not to post after the first day because I wanted to watch everything unfold. I've been rather anti 4 months simply because it wasn't an initial choice and I didn't want to complicate matters with a new choice.

There isn't a big difference between 3 and 4 but there is still a big leap between 4 and 6. So, I'm still not sure how I'm going to vote.

I thought I was going to vote for 3 months because if I wanted an issue and it was voted down then I would want a chance to reopen voting as soon as possible. But, if I won on an issue then I would want it to be up for reopening quickly which would push me towards 6 months.

Really, I'm just talking this out...


Rebecca Lizard - Mar 23, 2003 6:15:10 pm PST #312 of 10289
You sip / say it's your crazy / straw say it's you're crazy / as you bicycle your soul / with beauty in your basket

Let 6, 4, and 3 duke it out. Include preferences on the ballot, but (for now) count only first choices. If there is no majority, hold an old-fashioned run-off, then compare the result with what preferential tallying on the first ballot would have resulted in.

But obviously someone who favors 6 wrote this paragraph! In this situation, I'm nearly totally certain that 6 will win.

But I don't want 6 to win! t mock-sobs So I don't agree. In fact....

As Burrell said, there's piss-little difference between 3 months and 4 months. What the 3-or-4 people like *first* (as I see it) is the idea of a smaller time period than half a year, and then *secondly* they differentiate between the slightly-smaller one and the slightly-larger one.

And the idea was that (here let the numeral x stand for all the people who voted for x) 4 can't win vs. 3 + 6 (which it would have to, in brenda's situation), but maybe 3 + 4 can win over 6.

So perhaps (it seems, to my mind) the ballot would most fairly look like this:

QUESTION 1

1) 6 months
2) 3 or 4 months

QUESTION 2

In the event that option 2 of Question 1 wins:

1) 3 months
2) 4 months

-- do you see what I mean?