Basically, I just don't see anything that justifies such a harsh
viewpoint. There's a big difference between those examples and looking
up one vote on one decision, information available easily in the
resolution message. You'd basically be banning any conditional that
depends on anything a noticeable distance in the past, no matter how
easy the data is to find. I agree that people should only have to make
a reasonable effort, but I don't see anything unreasonable about
looking up a vote on a relatively recent decision.

-Aris


On Sun, Sep 23, 2018 at 9:03 PM Kerim Aydin <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> On Sun, 23 Sep 2018, Aris Merchant wrote:
> > I object. You’ve just stated that you have a strong personal opinion.
>
> Whether or not I judge this, I'm open to discussion and changing my first
> impression.
>
> (Obviously I can't make you not object, but using "expressing an opinion"
> as a reason suppresses dialog - would it have been better if I'd just
> favored it while keeping quiet about my current leanings?  "Having an
> opinion" is not the same thing as being self-interested or otherwise
> incapable of a fair judgement).  Anyway, some discussion...
>
> > Additionally, I found that CFJ. It’s CFJ 1214. It states pretty strongly
> > that this kind of thing was allowed at the time, although admittedly that
> > depends on details of how Orders worked under those rules.
>
> I'll counter with 2 CFJs:
> - CFJ 1307, which found that when things must be "specified", using
> references like "all" or other indirections does not sufficiently "specify".
> Obviously we've let that one slip (a lot) such that custom has superseded
> that precedent, but it's still a precedent.
>
> - CFJ 3659, with a more stringent interpretation of "clearly" than we've
> had in the past, noting R683 uses "clearly" for ballots.
>
> And for this question:
> > How is this different legally from the conditional vote “FOR if I voted FOR
> > last time, AGAINST if I voted against, otherwise PRESENT”? What legal
> > reasoning makes that kind of vote illegal when similar votes are not
> > illegal?
>
> Rule 2517 says that conditionals can't be "unreasonably difficult" to
> determine.  That's the legal reasoning.  The question is, where does that
> line lie?
>
> In CFJ 1460, Judge Maud gives of "unreasonable effort" that's along the
> lines of your idea:
> >   I cast a number of votes for proposal "Zig-Zag Lemma" equal to the
> >   number of times since 1996 that Michael and Kelly have voted with
> >   equal strength on a proposal using at least five but not more than
> >   forty of the words in a proposal from 1995.
> Now, Judge Maud here chose an example that was exaggeratedly unreasonable
> to make a point, but it's along the same lines.  The question is, where
> is that line drawn?
>
> Let me say I'm not certain:  I'm currently *skeptical* that your clause
> is reasonable, but I'm willing to consider carefully before trying to
> draw that line.
>
>

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