John Cowan wrote:

True but irrelevant,

You may not be alone in finding me irrelevant :-)

since (with one exception) local civil time is not
the subject of any international treaties that I know of.

But you were arguing a more absolute position:

There is and can be no contract, and so non-repudiation remains irrelevant.

You seem to find much irrelevancy in the world :-)

So now you admit there could be contracts in the form of treaties. My job here is done.

but are somehow restricted by the ITU from issuing their own leap
seconds?

They could, of course, do so, at the expense of being out of step with the rest of the world. It is choice, not compulsion, that makes every nation synchronize its LCT with UTC either de jure or de facto.

There is only choice in any arena. Compulsion is another word for "remedy". Obviously an entity with an army can attempt to do anything they want. (I'll refrain from an irrelevant political statement here.) The question is what happens economically, politically, scientifically, technically - etc. and so forth - as a result.

Apart from the ALHP proponents, the desire of people who want to see an end to leap seconds is to redefine the day as precisely 86400 SI seconds, and when the discrepancy between MSolT (which is not quite LSolT, be it noted) and LCT becomes annoyingly large in a particular place, to adjust the local UTC-TI offset accordingly,

This notion results in a merry-go-round of timezones sliding around the planet - including the International Date Line. I'm happy to accept your arguments about happy-go-lucky localities willy-nilly redefining their timezones, but as a result this seems a poor technical foundation for timekeeping in a world in which better timekeeping will be needed, not timekeeping at the whim of every local legislature and Presidente-for-life.

NOTE TO ITU LURKERS: Consider here that partisans of quite diverse - opposing even - positions consider the Leap Hour Proposal to be Absurd (hence the ALHP). Perhaps you could invest five minutes to consider what *will* actually happen as DUT1 grows? It's all well and good to attempt to cheat on solar time, but even the current fractional second difference between a solar second and an SI second adds up and the difference is going to grow with time. I won't belabor the arguments for why the ALHP is unacceptable, but John and I both think it is. How about developing some coherent and workable plan *before* dismantling the system we currently have? Note that it isn't just a static offset, its the slope that matters.

there is neither legal nor metaphysical necessity for it to be so, only convenience.

The fact that we live on a spinning globe illuminated externally in a way that impacts a myriad facets of our civilization seems pretty "physical" to me :-)

This may not be convenient, but it remains a requirement we're beholden to.

Rob

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