Yes, Seam assumes JTA. Of course I could go off and implement my whole own tx 
management layer on top of JDBC, that looks exactly like JTA, except isn't - 
just like everyone used to do (Hibernate, JPA, Spring, ...) but of course this 
is totally fucking nuts! You now have this horrible combinatorial problem of 
all these different fwks each having their own tx API, causing nightmarish 
integration problems when if they all would have just used what already exists 
and works just perfectly well, there would be no problem!

So at the moment I am refusing to contribute to making this problem worse, by 
not introducing my own tx abstraction. We use JTA, and thats it. You can use 
JBoss MC to get a lightweight JTA/JCA layer in any environment you like, just 
like the "jpa" and "hibernate2" examples do (type "ant deploy.tomcat"). But 
most environments (read everything except testng, junit and tomcat) already 
have JTA.

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