Okay, I think what is giving some folks the hives is the idea that EVERYTHING is potentially up for a vote. So why don't we just decide that this isn't the case. We don't want to open up the possibility for voting to fundamentally change Buffistas.
Giles ,'Selfless'
Bureaucracy 2: Like Sartre, Only Longer
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
What we're voting on is not-now, no way vs. maybe, in six months.
Yes = maybe in six months.
No = maybe tomorrow.
Can we bring up whether or not we want to have voting anymore? Is that also in the 6 month grandfather thing?
Since we voted on voting (heh), it doesn't need to be grandfathered. It already falls under the we-can-review-it-in-six-months category.
Well, we voted to have voting, so theoretically, yeah, 6 months from when voting was invented, we could have a proposal to stop voting. It makes no sense to me, and I think the peanut gallery would go bananas at the confusingness, but it could be done. No way I'd second it, but it could be proposed.
But we voted on voting, so it is not covered by grandfathering. Grandfathering covers only decisions made before we invented voting.
And if I want none of our old decisions brought up for voting at all?
That's not part of what's been proposed. The current proposal (if approved) does make some old decisions harder to vote on, i.e. someone has to remember to propose again come September, but we haven't yet had a proposal on making things difficult to undo.
I think I'm just confused as to what the point is? We wait six months to vote whether or not we want to demolish Bureaucracy, or we can do it tomorrow.
Ha! In fact, because we never discussed demolishing Bureaucracy before, and we've never voted it down, you can propose we demolish Bureaucracy tomorrow. I mean, you'll lose, but you can propose it. (The "make Bureaucracy users-only" proposal was just voted down, so it can't be tried again for 6 months -- November.) A General TV thread was discussed before we invented voting, but never really voted down so much as forgotten about: and if the grandfather proposal passes, it means we can't propose a General TV thread again until September.
Basically, it's "We made old decisions (before voting). Some good, some bad, whatever. Those old decisions: should we treat them just like votes, and have a waiting period of 6 months before you can bring them up again, or not?"
Why would we want to demolish Bureaucracy?
Oh, I was just using it as an example to make it clearer to me what the grandfather thread would accomplish in terms of time limits.
or possibly 8 elephants in a living room (I hope we're pink elephants)
Pink. leather Gingham.
Don'tcha read me at all? :)
I'm sorry, Wolfram. I shouldn't have used you as an example. That was rude.
When I thought you were using Jon B as your example, because you started with his paragraph about the exact amount of time in four days, that was all right. Wolfram has just been under a lot of singling out pressure lately.
Firefly 3: You Did Take The Sky From Me, You #%(&@#&
I laughed at this and scrolled back up later to laugh again. It is a nice break from the other stuff.
When you guys write these things, I wish you would write them for an audience that is reading quickly from work and needs a clear, concise, SIMPLE explanation of the proposal
I think we should take this instantly to heart. There's always a simpler way to explain something like computers, but I never think to look for it until someone tells me I'm making it way too complicated. Then I realize. We have to keep some precise language to make a good True or False question, but some of the heretofores are just us playing a Wittgensteinian language game with lawyertalk and can go.
1. I feel stupid all the time in these discussions. I am a non-mathy person who can't spell. This was actually why I strongly suggest that the pro and con be summarized for each vote. Leise and I (and others helped) did it for one of the votes it pretty clear language, I think.
Here it is. Sophia Brooks "Bureaucracy 1: Like Kafka, Only Funnier" Mar 15, 2003 10:51:05 pm EST Personally, I think it is hepful. Do we want to keep doing this? THing is, right now I seem to be the only person willing to do it, which is fine and I can right now, but once I start back at the theatre, following every argument is as time consuming as another job.
2. I don't think it is the voting that is doing this. When it is decided and clearly stuctured, it is just a means to an end-- counting. I agree with Cindy that many of the people who are unhappy now seemed to be FOR the complications, which is sometimes frustrating te me. It could just be my perception-- I know there were times I was FOR them, although after some thought I think I voted no to a lot after it was discussed.
3. Nutty-- I think the"lawspeak" which was a mammoth project-- I congratualate you for reading Bureacracy here-- should be posted but there should also be short bullet pointed instructions on how to vote-- I wrote them a bit back. This could be followed by a short list of the other votes. It would be like a quick reference and an encyclopedia. I am willing to find what I wrote and do some bullet points on the vote. I just really, really think it will help if we don't have to be asking about numbers and ays and such all the time. I was thoroughly involved in the process, I don't remember them, and I get frustrated going through Press to find them.
>And if I want none of our old decisions brought up for voting at all?
What kind of decisions would you want set in stone? Chances are those are things most people think are set in stone.
Do you want there always to be 4 Buffy threads, including Spoilage Lite, even though the show ends tonight?
We didn't start a voting process to change the board. We started voting to keep track - get a good count - of what final answer everyone gave when doing the business we've always done here.
Examples:
- War thread
- TV thread
- Tim Thread
- Close Buffy Spoilers Lite
- Merge Buffy Previously with Buffy NAFDA
Why is it being talked about as if voting is suddenly going to take Buffistas.org and turn it into a board where people must flame, must have donated bone marrow 7 times, and must have two left-feet - upon which a one-eyed monkey sits?
It's not the voting. The voting is a poll. Simple. Direct. We just didn't use Mr. Poll, because people cheated on the "monkey" thread title and decided to use an email form.
I agree with this, too. The problem was, we decided we needed to get fancy about it -- we decided we needed a specific time period, and a specific discussion thread, and a specific number of users, and before you know it, everyone is pissed off.
BUT we've only been doing this for two months. Maybe by August, it will be second nature. If not, we can open votng for a re-vote. (Har.)
Talking about bringing up "old issues" sounds confusing because then it seems like anything is up for revote.
I'm not sure which way I'm going to vote because I'm still not clear which vote is the one I want. I just can not get my head around this issue and it's frustrating as hell.
Also, why would closing the Spoiler Threads for Buffy even be a voting issue since the show is ending?