I think you have the whole confirmation process backwards. If you start from the premise that the absolute priority is to keep control in the hands of the establishment you naturally arrive at a need for at least two bodies arranged so that each acts as a guardianship council to the other.
Having arrived at the need for a confirmation process you then have to work out how to explain why they should exercise veto power over the consensus of the body as a whole. Nomcon provides a surrogate for consensus but in a form that ensures that there is no mandate. I know that people can find arguments as to why this is better than Nomcon qualified IETF participants having a vote. I got rather tired of arguments of the form 'this is better than democracy' after hearing them used to defend the 'need' to build the Berlin wall. -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Ralph Droms Sent: Sun 16/03/2008 9:16 PM To: Michael StJohns Cc: IETF Discussion Subject: Re: Confirming vs. second-guessing On Sun, 16 Mar 2008, Michael StJohns wrote: > [...] > Put another way, the Nomcom is a search committee, but the hiring > authority resides in the confirming bodies. Mike - I fundamentally and strongly disagree. In my opinoin, the Nomcom is the hiring committee; the confirming body is the oversight and sanity check body. The Nomcom is selected from the IETF as a whole to select the management for the IETF, who then serve at the pleasure of the IETF as a whole. The confirming bodies do not form a hierarchical management or hiring organization; rather, they perform a final check and review of the process. - Ralph _______________________________________________ IETF mailing list [email protected] https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf
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