My point is that in the case that you have a minority defending a status quo 
there is only one side that needs to progress. So a minority can feel that it 
has no need to compromise because it has a veto.

So consensus in that case turns out to be the tyranny of an obstructionist 
minority.

If you have a chair who is doing their job properly and honestly this need not 
be a problem. The process pretty much fails if the chair is part of the 
obstructionist minority.


On the ideology point, I tend to think of ideology as being when someone 
refuses to examine the situation or engage in an argument because they already 
know the answer and there is absolutely no possibility that they are wrong.

A consensus approach only works if either there are no ideological factions or 
everyone shares the same ideology.


> -----Original Message-----
> From: Sam Hartman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: Saturday, December 30, 2006 12:08 AM
> To: Hallam-Baker, Phillip
> Cc: Scott O. Bradner; [email protected]
> Subject: Re: "Discuss" criteria
> 
> >>>>> "Hallam-Baker," == Hallam-Baker, Phillip 
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
>     Hallam-Baker,> There is another problem to do with consensus and
>     Hallam-Baker,> the status quo.  Say we have a situation where a
>     Hallam-Baker,> clear majority of a working group believes that a
>     Hallam-Baker,> spec is unworkable unless a particular change is
>     Hallam-Baker,> made. A small minority opposes the change for
>     Hallam-Baker,> ideological reasons.
> 
>     Hallam-Baker,> Should the outcome in this case be:
> 
>     Hallam-Baker,> 1) Neither proposal can advance until there is
>     Hallam-Baker,> consensus 
> 
> Steve answered part of this.
> 
> If the minority is large enough--and I think that reasonably 
> small is large enough--then I think 1) is the right outcome.
> 
> Often you can get consensus on a way to break the deadlock 
> even if you can't get consensus on the issue directly.
> 
> 
> 
> There are a lot of things you as a chair can do to try and 
> break these deadlocks.  Ultimately, though, if you can't get 
> consensus you can't get consensus.
> 
> I realize we disagree on this point, but ideology is a fine 
> reason in my mind to fail to have consensus.
> 
> 

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