On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 10:46 PM, Kerim Aydin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> And yet I have yet to see a persuasive argument based on the Rules to
>> back up that opinion.
>
> It doesn't matter whether you see one at this point.

Heh.  Well, look at your arguments for appeal.  The first half is
irrelevant because it deals with the wrong right.  But this is the
interesting part:

> R101(iv) refers to becoming party to the initial agreement,
> not the equity result; agreeing to become party to
> the initial agreement as "binding" under these Rules
> means explicitly agreeing to a process in the Rules for
> enforcing the binding, and that is currently the equity
> process. Otherwise the term "binding" has no meaning.

With respect to everything after the semicolon, as CFJ 2101 was
initiated BEFORE "Take it to Equity!", (at the time of the CFJ) there
is a process in the Rules for enforcing the binding: criminal cases.

So we are left with:

"R101(iv) refers to becoming party to the initial agreement, not the
equity result".

Now, it seems pretty clear to me that equations are new binding
agreements-- do you disagree?  So, why should an equation be exempted
from the right?  R101 (iv) does not limit itself to any specific type
of binding agreement.

The answer, of course, is that equations were not envisioned as being
restricted by R101 (iv), and ruling that right ineffective would
prevent the equity court from being largely useless, and (thanks to
your recent proposal) the entire contracts system from being broken.
It also makes sense: why should Rule 101 protect me against an
agreement imposed by the Rules themselves?

Now, personally, I prefer a broken equity court.  But I also agree
that R101 (iv) "shouldn't" be affecting the case, and if it turns out
to be breaking the equity court, we should either explicitly legislate
the brokenness or work around it.

But -- as far as I can see -- there is nothing in the Rules that would
indicate that the right is ineffective.  The ambiguity is very small.

So it's a clash of two Agoran traditions: the tradition of
interpreting the Rules literally and applauding loopholes and
unintended side effects of Rules, and the tradition of interpreting
the Rules in the best interests of Agora to let the game continue--
see the Black Repeals, or really the Agoran reaction to many scams...
But this is not a scam.  Although "Take it to Equity!" may have
created some urgency in the matter, I think we have the time to afford
ruling the case based solely on the merits, and-- if it is what the
majority of Agorans want-- to fix the loophole, or R101.

Proto-proposal: Repeal Rule 101.

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