Originally posted by Togas
There's some good suggestions in here of potential loopholes we're going to close up, but .... come on! This level of dissection is self-serving pomposity.
There's some good suggestions in here of potential loopholes we're going to close up, but .... come on! This level of dissection is self-serving pomposity.
I would hope that we can all respect each others' involvement in this as a matter of civic responsibility and respect each other as fellow concerned citizens... such rhetoric as the above has no place here.
This is a Constitution not a volumous code of laws, policy, procecure, and definitions. This is a framework document that will be colored in by both the Senate and the Court. This document is already 8+ pages long, which is far too much for any newbie to digest, and people want us to add more to it?
Secondly, how hard is it to figure out what "or" means? I'm baffled by this. If I said, "You have to get permission from John or Harry to go to the party" what does that mean? There's no ambiguity there. Either John OR Harry can say yes. You don't have to ask both, and if one says no, you can ask the other and still go to the party. How much more obvious do you need it to be?
--Togas
Secondly, how hard is it to figure out what "or" means? I'm baffled by this. If I said, "You have to get permission from John or Harry to go to the party" what does that mean? There's no ambiguity there. Either John OR Harry can say yes. You don't have to ask both, and if one says no, you can ask the other and still go to the party. How much more obvious do you need it to be?
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--Togas
I was working under the assumption that it could be agreed that ambiguous lines of responsibility was best avoided. Obviously, that assumption was invalid
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You actually MEANT for the "or" lines to give the FAM the ability to pick whether he liked the response of one minister or other other better and choose the one he likes... I now understand that that is actually what you meant, but here is where I must very strongly disagree with this on principle.
Most of the cases where this occurs are under the FAM and Domestic Minister. Here are the three main examples:
* The FAM must ask the President OR the SMC to sign a peace agreement.
* The FAM must ask the Senate OR the President before giving away any money.
* The Domestic Minister must ask the Senate OR the President before rushing a project.
The problem with all three of these is precisely the RL example you brought up, Togas. The kid wanting to go to the party can ask both and take the answer he likes... Perhaps you don't have a problem with this, but I'm near certain that I'm not the only one that finds this type of thing very uncomfortable. I'd much rather have a clear line of authority.
For the "Senate or the President" ones, it seems that simply changing the wording slightly and inserting a reference to Article I, Section 7 about the supremacy of Senate laws over Executive decisions. This would mean that in cases of "Senate or the President", the FAM or Domestic Minister would be forced to abide by the Senate's decision if the Senate actually acted on the matter (which is far from certain) and only follow the President if the Senate does NOT act on it. This is workable.
As for the case where the FAM can ask the SMC or the President on when he can end a war, my personal opinion on this is that the FAM should have to:
1. Get the approval of BOTH (not just pick the answer he wants to hear...)
2. Get approval from the President only (delete the SMC from this line)
3. Get approval from the SMC only (delete the President from this line)
4. Delete the entire approval issue from this line and place the decision on the FAM's shoulders.
I personally prefer #4, but any of these four are perfectly workable.
That's all for now... gotta run.
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