Rule 355 is herby repealed.
Proposal 602 - Thu Apr 4 04:41:33 EST 1996
Proposals, Dependant
pTang1001001sos (Mark Nau)
Decision: Accepted
A Proposal to create a new Rule, that will read, in whole: (i) A Proposal is Dependant iff it contains text stating that it is Dependant and specifies which other Proposal(s) it is Dependant upon. The Rules may specify other means of making a Proposal Dependant upon another Proposal.
(ii) Whenever there is a set of Proposals such that every member of the set is Dependant upon every other member of the set, each member of this set is said to be Bundled with each of the other members.
(iii) Whenever a Proposal is resolved and fails to pass, all Proposals that are Dependant upon that Proposal are retracted without penalty to the author.
(iv) A Proposal's voting period shall not expire before all Proposals that it is Dependant upon, but NOT Bundled with, have been resolved.
(v) Whenever a Proposal creates a new Rule, any text stating the Proposal's Dependancies shall not appear in the new Rule.
(vi) A Proposal X is Distantly Dependant upon another Proposal Y iff there exists a Proposal Z such that X is Dependant or Distantly Dependant upon Z and Z is Dependant upon Y. [So if P600 depends on P599 and P598 depends on P599, P598 is Distantly Dependant upon P600]
(vii) A Proposal is held to be Dependant upon all Proposals that it is Distantly Dependant upon. [[This rule allows an author to state that the Proposal shall disappear should some other Proposal fail to pass. The Bundle stuff is there to prevent the problem of multiple Proposals waiting for the others to pass. (vi) and (vii) are there to prevent a different sort of paradox that can occur. Write me private E-mail if you want to discuss these clauses, or if my explanation was insufficient.]]
Proposal 603 - Thu Apr 4 04:42:33 EST 1996
Names are Unique
fon (Adrian Smith)
Decision: Accepted
A player may not change their name to that of another player.
Proposal 604 - Thu Apr 4 04:43:31 EST 1996
After a Name Change
fon (Adrian Smith)
Decision: Accepted
When a player changes their Ackanomic name, all Ackanomic business (for example CJF's and offices) will be changed to follow their new name.
Proposal 605 - Thu Apr 4 11:01:57 EST 1996
Amend 306
snowgod (Phil Ackley)
Decision: Rejected
This rule will amend rule 306 by adding the following sentences to the end of the first paragraph:In addition, the player holding the Magic Potato may change his score to any whole number that will factor into 106,842 by announcing publically that he has done so. This score change shall only be valid during the week said player holds the Magic Potato. When a player releases the Magic Potato his score will revert to it's previous value.
Proposal 606 - Thu Apr 4 11:04:26 EST 1996
Amend 201 - Quorum
Wayne (Wayne Sheppard)
Decision: Rejected
Rule 201 shall be amended to read:Quorum is defined to be 20% of the active registered players.
Proposal 607 - Thu Apr 4 12:37:17 EST 1996
File Clerk, Creation of:
pTang1001001sos (Mark Nau)
Decision: Accepted
A Proposal to create a new Rule, that will read, in whole:
----------------------------------------------------------------- (i) The Functional Office of File Clerk is hereby created.
(ii) There shall be one Seat for this Office.
(iii) The Duties are:
a) To serve as the Officer responsible for recieving copies of all Contracts.
b) To keep a private record of all Enforcable Contracts.
c) To make an Enforcable Contract public upon the request of one of the Players involved in that Contract.
d) To NOT disclose or make reference to any of the specifics of any Enforcable Contract unless required to by (iii)c of this Rule.
(iv) The Privileges are:
a) To receive the usual salary for a Functional Officer.
b) The right to demand receipt of a filing fee of .30 units from each Player involved in an Enforcable Contract when that Contract is submitted. This transaction shall be accomplished in the proper fashion. If one or more Players involved in the Contract cannot or will not pay the fee, the Contract is deemed to be non-Enforcable.
(v) An Acting File Clerk has the right to demand payment of the filing fee. This section takes precendence over all mutable rules.
Proposal 608 - Fri Apr 5 00:33:16 EST 1996
Offices, Starting List of
pTang1001001sos (Mark Nau)
Decision: Accepted
(i) Offices:
Each of the following Ackanomic entities, if it exists, is considered to be an Office: President, Senator, Justice, Financier, Promoter, Clerk of the Court, Publicist, Tabulator, Web-Harfer, Registrar, Pollster, Scorekeeper. Other entities may be Offices if so specified by the Rules. (ii) Functional Offices:
Each of the following Ackanomic entities, if it exists, is considered to be a Functional Office: Promoter, Clerk of the Court, Publicist, Tabulator, Web-Harfer, Registrar, Pollster, Scorekeeper. Other entities may be Functional Offices if so specified by the Rules.
Proposal 609 - Fri Apr 5 00:33:48 EST 1996
Offices, Commonalities
pTang1001001sos (Mark Nau)
Decision: Accepted
The following applies to all Offices: (i) Seats:
The Rule that creates an Office should specify how many players can hold that Office at any one time. This is referred to as the number of "Seats" an Office has. If the Rules fail to specify the number of Seats for any given Office, the Office has only one Seat. A Seat is either held by one Player or it is vacant. (ii) Duties:
The Duties of an Office are the tasks that the Officer(s) are expected to carry out to facilitate the conduct of Ackanomic business. Duties tend to be typified by the compilation, maintenance, and distribution of information. (iii) Privileges:
The Privileges of an Office are the considerations the Officer(s) receive according to the Rules regulating the Office. Examples can include the receipt of Ackanomic currency, the ability to cast extra votes in certain circumstance, or special consideration with regards to making appointments or issuing CFJ decisions. (iv) Acting Officers:
The Rules may specify conditions under which a Player serves in an Office in an "Acting" capacity. In such a case, the Player is responsible for performing all of the Duties without receiving any of the Privileges of the Office. For any given Seat, there can be an "Acting" Officer only if the Seat is vacant. (v) Salaries:
If the Rules specify that a particular Officer is to be paid a certain amount of currency (a "salary") periodically as one of the Privileges of Office:
- Unless otherwise specified, the payment shall be in units of the Official currency of Ackanomic, should such an entity exist.
- The payment is considered to happen every Tuesday at noon Eastern time if the salary is weekly. (vi) Term of Office:
a) The Rules may specify a Term of Office, which is the amount of time a Player may hold an Office before his Term is considered to have expired. If the Rules fail to specify a Term for any Office, the Office is considered to have none, which is to say that the Term never expires.
b) When a Player's Term expires, he is no longer considered to be holding the Office. The Player performs the Office in an "Acting" role until the Seat is filled. (vii) Stepping Down:
An Officer may always voluntarily step down from office, leaving it vacant. Whenever possible, the Officer should give at least 3 day's notice of his intention to vacate an office.
Proposal 610
Due to a numbering error, no proposal was officially assigned this number.
Proposal 611 - Fri Apr 5 10:43:41 EST 1996
Offices, Related Definitions
pTang1001001sos (Mark Nau)
Decision: Accepted
(i) A Nomination is conducted as follows: a) The appropriate Officer publicly announces the beginning of the Nomination, the reason the Nomination is being called, and when the Nomination shall end. b) If there is no Nomination Period specified for the Nomination, the default Period is 48 hours. c) During the Nomination Period, volunteers shall notify the appropriate Officer of their intent to be considered. d) At the end of the Nomination Period, the appropriate Officer shall publicly report the list of eligible volunteers (Nominees). e) If there are no eligible volunteers, the Nomination Period shall continue until there is an eligible volunteer. f) If the rules fail to state who is eligible to volunteer, then all Players are eligible. (ii) An Election for Office is conducted as follows: a) A Nomination is conducted. Any Player who is eligible to hold the Office is eligible to volunteer. b) The appropriate Officer publicly announces the start of the Election, the Office for which the Election is being held, and when the Election will end. c) If there is no Election Period specified for the Election, the default Period is 72 hours. d) During the Election Period, each Player may cast one vote for any one of the Nominees by so notifying the appropriate Officer. e) At the end of the Election Period, the appropriate Officer shall publicly announce the vote tallies for each Nominee, and which Nominee(s) shall hold the Office. f) Letting N stand for the number of vacant Seats for the Office in question, the top N Nominees, ranked by votes received, shall hold the Office. g) In the event of a tie for number of votes received, the tie can be resolved in one of the following manners: 1) Random: the Speaker shall randomly assign a ranking order among any Nominees tied for votes received. 2) <Officer> Preference: the Officer named shall select a ranking order among any Nominees tied for votes. 3) New Election: the entire Election for Office shall start over, with all results of the current Election for Office disregarded. h) If the Rules fail to specify what method shall be used to resolve ties, then the Random method shall be used.
Proposal 612 - Fri Apr 5 10:45:56 EST 1996
Functional Offices, Commonalities
pTang1001001sos (Mark Nau)
Decision: Accepted
This Proposal is Dependant upon the Proposal entitled "Offices, Starting List of" This rule takes precedence over all mutable rules. The following applies to all Functional Offices: (i) A functional Office has only one Seat unless the Rules specify otherwise. (ii) As a Privilege of Office, each Player holding at least one Functional Office shall receive a weekly salary equal to the maximum of: a) 1 unit plus .25 units for every Office held. b) The salary that the Player would be eligible to receive if he held no Functional Offices. (iii) A Functional Officer going on vacation shall be judged to have vacated his Seat for the period of the vacation, after which he shall hold the Seat once again. At his discretion, the Appointer may appoint a volunteer to fill an "Acting" role for a Functional Office vacated by vacation. In this case, there shall be no action to fill the empty Seat. This section takes precedence over section (vi) of this Rule. (iv) Whenever a Functional Office has a vacant Seat, and there is no Acting Officer for that Seat, the Appointer is to be the Acting Officer for that Seat. (v) Functional Officers may be impeached by the following process: a) The Appointer declares publicly his intention to impeach a stated Player from a given Functional Office. b) At least 2/3 of Senators concur with the impeachment by so notifying the Appointer within 72 hours of the Appointer's declaration. c) At this time, the Functional Office is vacant. (vi) Whenever a Functional Office has a vacant Seat, the Appointer shall conduct a Nomination for that Seat. After the Nomination, the following process is followed: a) If at any time there is only one eligible Nominee, then that Player will hold the Functional Office. b) The Appointer will select an eligible Nominee, now called the "Candidate", to fill the Office. The Appointer will notify each Senator of his selection for Candidate. c) When at least 1/2 of Senators confirm the Candidate by so indicating to the Appointer, or whenever 48 hours have passed since the notification to the Senate, the Candidate shall hold the Office. d) Whenever more than 1/2 of the Senators reject the Candidate by so indicating to the Appointer, the Candidate is no longer considered to be an eligible Nominee. The process returns to section(vi), clause "a" of this Rule.
Proposal 613 - Fri Apr 5 10:46:32 EST 1996
Offices, Impeachment
pTang1001001sos (Mark Nau)
Decision: Accepted
This Proposal is Dependant upon the Proposal entitled "Offices, Commonalities" This Rule takes precedence over all mutable rules. An Officer is Impeached by the following process: (i) An Impeachment Paper (IP) is authored by a Player and submitted to the same Officer responsible for distributing Proposals. The IP shall contain the stated intent to remove one Player from one Office held by that Player. An author may only have one IP pending at any one time. (ii) The IP shall be distributed publicly. All Players except the Officer named in the IP shall be able to cast one vote either YES or NO on the matter of removing said Officer from Office. The voting period shall be 3 days. (iii) Upon submission of the IP, the Player in question shall no longer be considered to hold the Seat, instead filling an "Acting" role for the Office. There shall be no action taken to fill that Seat until the IP is resolved. (iv) At the expiration of the voting period, there will be a resolution of ACCEPTED or REJECTED for the IP. An IP is REJECTED unless it meets ALL of the conditions below, in which case it is ACCEPTED: a) At least 1/2 of all active Players, excluding the Officer named in the IP, voted YES. b) At least 2/3 of all Players who voted on the IP voted YES. (v) If the IP is ACCEPTED, the Player named in the IP is no longer considered to be the "Acting" officer, and the Seat is open. (vi) If the IP is REJECTED, the Player named in the IP is restored to Office, and the author of the IP is penalized 10 points. Also, the author of the IP cannot author an IP for a period of one month. (vii) The Rules may specify additional means of impeachment without invalidating the process outlined above. As well, this rule defers to all other rules on the matter of what conditions are required for an IP to be ACCEPTED.
Proposal 614 - Fri Apr 5 10:46:57 EST 1996
Appointer, Creation of
pTang1001001sos (Mark Nau)
Decision: Accepted
This Proposal is Dependant upon the three Proposals entitled "Offices, Commonalities", "Offices, Starting List of", and "Offices, Related Definitions" (i) The Office of Appointer is hereby created. (ii) There shall be one Seat for this Office. (iii) This Office shall be filled by an Election for Office. If this process is undefined, the Office shall not exist so long as this condition continues. (iv) The Duties are: a) To publicly announce the occurrence of an open Seat for a Functional Office. b) To serve as a source for notices from volunteers for Functional Office. c) To publicly announce the occurrence of a Player being appointed to hold a Functional Office. (v) The Privileges are: a) To decide who among the volunteers shall be selected to hold an open Seat for Functional Office. b) A salary of 1 unit per week. (vi) Whenever this Office is vacant, the Speaker shall be the Acting Appointer unless the Rules otherwise state. In this one instance, the Speaker may exercise Privilege "a" as listed in section (v) of this Rule. This takes precedence over any Rule that would prevent this action.
Proposal 615 - Fri Apr 5 10:47:20 EST 1996
Speaker
pTang1001001sos (Mark Nau)
Decision: Accepted
This Proposal is Dependant upon the Proposal entitled "Offices, Commonalities" This rule takes precedence over all mutable rules. (i) The Office of Speaker is declared to have one Seat. (ii) Whenever this Office is vacant, it shall be filled by an Election for Office. The specifications for the Election for Office are: a) Nomination Period: 48 hours. b) Voting Period: 72 hours. c) Tie Resolution: New Election. (iii) As an additional Privilege of Office, the Speaker shall receive a weekly salary of 10 units. (iv) Whenever the Speaker goes on vacation, he is considered to be temporarily vacating the Office until he returns from vacation. No action shall be taken to fill the office. The Speaker shall appoint a volunteer to be Acting Speaker for the vacation period. If there are no volunteers, then the Clerk of the Court shall be Acting Speaker for the duration. This section takes precendence over section (ii) of this Rule. (v) Upon passage of this Rule, Robert Sevin will hold the one Seat of the Office of Speaker, and section (v) shall be subsequently stricken from this Rule.
Proposal 616 - Sat Apr 6 10:05:58 EST 1996
Confidentiality
snowgod (Phil Ackley)
Decision: Retracted By Author Using Rule 423
All electronic messages transmitted between players or observers (or any combination thereof) shall be deemed private, and may not be redistributed to anyone other than the original sender or recipient(s) without express permission of all involved parties. This rule applies to all forms of electronic messages not specifically excluded in this rule be they E-mail, IRC logs, Audio Clips, Video Clips or any other form of comunication possible over the internet. Any player or observer who redistributes a private electronic message shall have his score reduced by 20 points, and shall not be allowed to vote or propose rule changes for one week. Any penalties (if they exist) that apply to not voters shall still apply. Furthermore, any private electronic message that is redistributed shall be considered invalid, and will not be be used in the promulgation of officil ackanomic business. Nor shall redistibuted private electronic messages by allowed as evidence (should it exist) in any court procedings (should they exist) The following forms of comunication shall be deemed public and are excluded from this rule: 1) All Ackanomic list mailings 2) Proposals submitted in the correct manner 3) Calls for Judgement submitted in the correct manner 4) Poll replies submitted in the correct manner 5) Votes submitted in the correct manner 6) Proposals revisions submitted in the correct manner 7) Requests for Financial Transactions submitted in the correct manner 8) Any other release of information by an Officer of information submitted in the correct manner in accordance with the rules affecting that office. This rule supercedes all other applicable rules.
Proposal 617- Sat Apr 6 10:06:36 EST 1996
Official Language of Ackanomic
snowgod (Phil Ackley)
Decision: Rejected
Pig Latin shall be the official language of Ackanomic. All ackanomic list messages from this day forward must be posted in pig latin. An english translation may be provided, but must be placed on the page following the complete text of the message originally written in Pig Latin. In addition, the Web-Harfer will be required to maintain a pig latin version of all ackanomic pages. Proposals submitted in Pig Latin will be become rules in Pig Latin upon passage.
Proposal 618 - Sat Apr 6 10:30:56 EST 1996
Amend 485 - The Prescribed Voting Period
Niccolo Flychuck (Uri Bruck)
Decision: Retracted By Author Using Rule 423
The words:"The prescribed voting period on a proposal is seven days," Will now read "The prescribed voting period on a proposal is ten days,"
Proposal 619 - Sun Apr 7 01:38:32 EST 1996
Amending R203
Malenkai (Randy Hall)
Decision: Rejected
In R203, replace the phrase "two-thirds" with the phrase "60 percent or more".
Proposal 620 - Sun Apr 7 23:15:27 EDT 1996
Balancing Party Bonuses
Nicolo Flychuck (Uri Bruck)
Decision: Rejected
1. This rule is only active when there are three or more political parties, and a rule exists for giving a bonus for a party based on the way party members vote. 2. If all parties, not counting abstenations, vote the same way, and each party receives a bonus according to the way party members vote, additional votes will be cast the other way, which will be reffered to to as anti-votes, according to the following rule: let n be the number of parties let v be the number of anti-votes v=n/3 rounded up to the nearest integer hence, if there are 1-3 parties there will be 1 anti-vote if there are 4-6 parties, there will be 2 anti-votes etc. 4. If a vote is is either unanimously YES or unanimously NO, then no anti-votes will be cast.
Proposal 621 - Tue Apr 09 11:30:52 EDT 1996
Historian
Malenkai (Randy Hall)
Decision: Accepted
1) The office of the Historian is hereby created. There will be one seat for this office.2) Upon vacancy of the office, it will be filled on a volunteer basis. Upon multiple volunteers, the Speaker will choose one [preferably one with access to a web server]. In the event that no volunteers come forth, the office will remain vacant and its duties unfulfilled.
3) Salary: The Historian will draw a salary as appropriate for a Functional Office. Should this term be undefined or its salary be undefined, the salary will be 0.
4) Term: The Historian will hold the office until he or she resigns or until he or she is Impeached.
5) Duties: The Historian will be responsible for maintaining a WWW page of the History of Ackanomic. Content of the page is up to the Historian [but should include the comings and goings of political parties (and their adjendas); history of Presidents, Senators, and Winners, notable historical events such as the Quorum Crisis, etc].
The site of the Ackanomic History Web Page shall be jointly chosen by the Historian and the Web-Harfer. Note that the Historian is ultimately responsible, and should not create more work for the Web-Harfer.
Proposal 622 - Tue Apr 09 11:33:26 EDT 1996
Amending R499: RFC
Malenkai (Randy Hall)
Decision: Accepted
Amend R499 to insert the following paragraph, directly after the paragraph which begins with the phrase "The SL for a message containing any official announcement":The SL for a message containing a draft proposal shall have the following form: "Ackanomic: RFC (text)" (where (text) is not required, but encouraged). The key word that cannot be altered is "RFC". [Note that the acronym RFC stands for "Request For Comment"].
[[This rule is intended to somewhat codify the notion of draft proposals without being overly bureaucratic, and to shorten subject lines.]]
Proposal 623 - Wed Apr 17 12:01:51 EDT 1996
Amending "What is a Rule Change?"
Mohammed (Jason Orendorff)
Decision: Retracted By Author Using Rule 423
The Rule Titled "What is a Rule Change?" shall be amended to read: ----- (i) A rule change is a body of text. (ii) The effect of the adoption of a rule change is the effect described by the text of the rule change, unless the text has been judged to be nonsense, in which case it has no effect. [The judgement has to come during the proposal's voting period.] (iii) A body of text is nonsense if one or more of the following apply: (a) It discusses or describes effects that are outside the scope of the game. (b) It is ambiguous, or describes an ambiguous effect. (c) It is not written in standard English, unambiguous typographical errors aside. (d) It has no intelligible meaning.
Proposal 624 - Wed Apr 17 12:04:09 EDT 1996
Proposal Controls
Mohammed (Jason Orendorff)
Decision: Rejected
A new rule shall be created, reading: ----- (i) [proposal rejection] A message to the Promoter submitting a proposal is a Go submission if the subject field of the submission contains the word "go". Otherwise it is a non-Go submission. The Promoter may respond to a non-Go submission with a request that its author rephrase it, add notes, correct typos, and so on. Such a response is called a submission rejection. When the Promoter rejects a submission, no proposal is generated by it, and the Promoter has no further Duties in regards to that submission. [ Non-Go submissions that aren't rejected, and all Go submissions, do generate proposals. The Promoter is obligated to handle these in the usual way. ] Rejecting submissions is a Privilege of the office of the Promoter. (ii) [proposal editing] The Promoter may, before or after distributing a proposal generated by a non-Go submission, change the text of the proposal in the following ways, provided such changes neither alter the meaning of the text nor resolve any ambiguities inherent in it: (a) He or she may correct inaccurate spelling. (b) He or she may correct non-standard or confusing grammar. This is a Privilege of the office of the Promoter. (iii) This rule takes precedence over other rules defining the duties of the Promoter. This rule takes precedence over other rules describing the process of proposal submission and distribution.
Proposal 625 - Wed Apr 17 12:05:49 EDT 1996
"Changing Rule Changes"
Mohammed (Jason Orendorff)
Decision: Retracted By Author Using Rule 423
Amend the Rule titled "What is a Rule Change?" to read:"All rule changes are valid. When a rule change is adopted, the legal effect (if any) described by its text is carried out. Rule changes may create, destroy, or manipulate protected objects."
Proposal 626 - Wed Apr 17 12:12:40 EDT 1996
Rule "Suites"; Explicit Permission
The Governor (Dan Marsh)
Decision: Rejected
A rule "suite" shall be defined as a set of rules to be voted on as a unit. The proposal of rule suites shall be explicitly permitted. Each individual rule in a suite may be referred to as a "splinter."
All rules proposed thus shall have the same ordinal number, followed by consecutive lowercase letters of the Roman alphabet, in an order specified by the player proposing the rule suite. Each player shall cast his vote, in accordance with the rules, for the entire suite of rule proposals. The results of the vote shall determine the fate of the entire suite of rules.
Once a rule suite is enacted, the splinters of the suite shall be treated as if they were individual rules. While (exclusive of letters) individual splinters have the same ordinal number, their priority shall be in order of their proposal, with those coming earlier in the proposal coming before those which come later.
[[Dependency is an awkward way to propose rules, even though the Michigan Legislature does it all the time. This proposal would let all of the dependent rules be proposed at once, with ONE vote deciding the outcome. I don't see a problem with this rule if the Dependency rules pass, but they might then be unneccesary.]]
Proposal 627 - Wed Apr 17 12:16:55 EDT 1996
Amendment of a Rule to a Rule Suite
The Governor (Dan Marsh)
Decision: Rejected
If rule suites may be proposed, then a player may propose that a rule be amended so as to become a rule suite. The format of the proposal shall conform both to the rules governing proposals to amend rules and to the rules governing proposals of rule suites.
Proposal 628 - Wed Apr 17 12:19:39 EDT 1996
Priority of Rules with Equal Priority
The Governor (Dan Marsh)
Decision: Rejected
(a) Should the application of all other rules result in two or more rules having equal priority, they shall be ordered by their length in words, with the rules with fewer words having priority over the rules with more words. The words in the titles and histories of the rules are not to be counted. A "word" for the purposes of this rule shall be defined as a sequence of one or more consecutive characters, at least one of which shall be a letter of the Roman alphabet, bounded by one or more spaces.
(b) Should the application of part (a) of this rule result in two or more rules having equal priority, they shall be ordered by their length in letters, excluding spaces or punctuation, with the rules with fewer letters having priority over the rules with more letters. The letters in the titles and histories of the rules are not to be counted. A "letter" for the purposes of this rule shall be defined as a letter of the Roman alphabet, in either its uppercase or lowercase form.
(c) Should the application of parts (a) and (b) of this rule result in two or more rules having equal priority, the rules in conflict shall be ordered alphabetically, with the rules coming earlier alphabetically having priority over those coming later.
(d) This rule shall have precedence over any rule which explicitly gives rules equal priority.
[[This proposal isn't currently needed, but it could be. My first draft of my Rule Suites proposal gave the splinters of the rule equal priority. Other rules might in the future explicitly or inadvertantly give rules equal priority.]]
Proposal 629 - Wed Apr 17 12:23:06 EDT 1996
Constitutional Convention; Procedure
The Governor (Dan Marsh)
Decision: Accepted
(a) A proposal to hold a Constitutional Convention is not a "proposal" as the word is used in any other rule. (b) (1) Any player may make a proposal to hold a Constitutional Convention. (2) A proposal to hold a Constitutional Convention shall be made and distributed in the manner that the rules specify that proposals are to be made and distributed. (c) (1) If a proposal is made to hold a Constitutional Convention, the Tabulator shall accept votes on the proposal to hold a Constitutional Convention for the length of the Official Voting Period. (2) If, at the end of the official voting period, 3/4 or more of the votes received by the Tabulator in accordance with section (c) (1) of this rule excluding votes of "PRESENT" are "YES", then a Constitutional Convention shall be called. (3) If, at the end of the official voting period, less than 3/4 of the votes received by the Tabulator in accordance with section (c) (1) of this rule excluding votes of "PRESENT" are "YES", the proposal to hold a Constitutional Convention shall be deemed to have failed. (d) (1) If a Constitutional Convention is called, the position of Delegate to the Constitutional Convention shall exist. This position may be referred to as "Delegate." The Delegates may be referred to collectively as the "Convention." (2) The Tabulator shall accept nominations for Delegate for the length of the Official Voting Period. (3) Each player may nominate a maximum of one player to the position of Delegate by sending a message to the Tabulator which informs him of the player so nominated. (4) (i) At the end of the Official Voting Period, the Tabulator shall determine the three players receiving the greatest number of nominations. These players shall be considered to have been elected as Delegates. (ii) If the application of section (d) (4) (i) of this rule does not result in exactly three players being elected as Delegates, the Tabulator shall choose exactly three players by a method of his choosing. Each of the three players so chosen must have received at least as many nominations for Delegate as any player not chosen. [If that isn't clear, I'm trying to let the Tabulator resolve ties in the quickest way possible.] (5) The Tabulator shall inform all players which three players were elected Delegates to the Constitutional Convention. (e) (1) The Delegates may meet and confer in any manner of their choosing, whether private or public. (2) The Delegates shall produce a report which shall reflect the unanimous opinion of the Delegates. This report shall be posted to all players. (3) (i) The Report produced by the Delegates shall recommend one or more of the items in sections (e) (3) (iv) through (e) (3) (vii) of this rule. (ii) The recommendations of the Report shall be specific and shall state the mutability of each rule which would be changed or added if the recommendations were adopted. (iii) The report shall give the reasons for the delegates' recommendations. (iv) The Report may recommend the adoption of zero or more rules. (v) The Report may recommend the amendment of zero or more rules. (vi) The Report may recommend the repeal of zero or more rules. (vii) The Report may recommend the replacement of the entire rule set. (viii) The immutability of any rule shall not hinder the Convention's recommendations. (f) (1) (i) After the Report of the Convention has been posted to all players, the Tabulator shall accept votes on the question of whether to accept the Report for the length of the Official Voting Period. (ii) A vote of "YES" shall be to accept the Report, and a vote of "NO" shall be to reject the Report. (iii) Only players may vote on the question of accepting the Report of the Convention. (iv) Each player may cast a maximum of one vote. (2) If, at the end of the Official Voting Period, 7/8 of the votes received, exclusive of votes of "PRESENT", are "YES", then the Report of the Convention shall be Accepted. (g) If the Report of the Convention is Rejected, then the position of Delegate shall cease to exist. (h) (1) If the Report of the Convention is Accepted, then the game shall end, following all subsections to section (h) of this rule. (2) A game of AckaNomic shall be created with a rule set which shall be the same as the rule set to the game which has ended, with the recommendations of the Report of the Convention made to the rule set of the game thus created. If the Report recommended replacing the entire rule set, then the rule set recommended shall be the rule set created by this subsection. The game created by this subsection may be referred to by this section as the "new game". (3) All players of the game which has ended shall automatically be players in the new game. (4) All players shall begin the new game with all points, items, properties, and titles which were held in the game which has ended, at the time that it ended. (5) If, in the new game, a "score" exists, then each Delegate to the Constitutional Convention in the game which has ended shall receive have his score in the new game increased by twenty. This subsection shall not have effect if it violates the rules of the new game. (j) (1) If a proposal to hold a Constitutional Convention has been made, another shall not be made until one of the items in (j) (2) through (j) (4) has occurred. (2) The proposal to hold a Constitutional Convention has failed, and one week has passed since said proposal failed. (3) A report of the Delegates to the Constitutional Convention has been delivered, it has been rejected, and one week has passed since said report was rejected. (4) A report of the Delegates to the Constitutional Convention has been accepted. (5) A proposal to hold a Constitutional Convention which is invalid by section (j) of this rule shall be officially ignored. This subsection shall not bar notification to the proposing player that the proposal is invalid. (k) Should any term in this rule be undefined, the Speaker shall define it if and when this rule is invoked. If the "Speaker" is not defined, then the player invoking this rule shall appoint a player other than himself to act as Speaker for the purposes of this rule. [[The only objection I got to this when it was a draft proposal was that it was too powerful. Of course it is, that's the point. But, with the votes necessary to effect radical change set 3/4 and 7/8, I'm not sure that really radical change is actually possible. Should this rule pass, I intend to invoke it for the purpose of rationalizing the arrangement of the rules, and attempting to ensure that they stay rationalized. I'll make a more complete proposal to those ends if and after this rule passes.]]
Proposal 630 - Wed Apr 17 12:27:22 EDT 1996
Anti-Party Votes
Niccolo Flychuck (Uri Bruck)
Decision: Retracted By Author Using Rule 423
1. This rule is only active when there are three or more political parties, and a rule exists for giving a bonus for a party based on the way party members vote.
2. If all parties, not counting abstenations, vote the same way, and each party receives a bonus according to the way party members vote, additional votes will be cast the other way, which will be reffered to to as anti-votes, according to the following rule:
let n be the number of parties
let v be the number of anti-votesv=n/3 rounded up to the nearest integer
hence, if there are 1-3 parties there will be 1 anti-vote if there are 4-6 parties, there will be 2 anti-votes etc.4. If a vote is is either unanimously YES or unanimously NO, then no anti-votes will be cast.
Proposal 631 - Wed Apr 17 12:31:52 EDT 1996
Amend on Rule "Welcomer, Creation of"
CarsesraC (Jeroen M.W. van Dijk)
Decision: Rejected
By this proposal the 'Gee, Wally' condition will be remove from rule The lines to be removed are =============================================================== b) A bonus of .10 units of currency each time the "Gee, Wally" condition is met according to section (v) of this Rule. (v) The "Gee, Wally" condition is met whenever all of the following apply: a) A Player sends a message to ONLY the Financier that contains the phrase: "Gee, Wally, this sure is a neat game." b) The Player sending the message mentioned in section (i) does so during a time period running from 28 to 42 days after the Player first became a Player. c) The Player sending the message mentioned in section (i) has never before sent a message that triggered a "Gee, Wally" condition. d) The message is received on a Tuesday or a Friday, and no "Gee, Wally" condition has been triggered yet that day. e) The Officer holding the Welcomer Office has made no reference to the Player of the "Gee, Wally" condition other than the following sentences: "There is a way you can give me bonus currency if you think I've done a good job as Welcomer. I'm not allowed to tell you anything more about this." (vi) Whenever currency is to be awarded as a consequence of the "Gee, Wally" condition, the Financier should report the change as a result of "mysterious conditions." (vii) Any Player who makes any mention of the "Gee, Wally" condition except as allowed by this Rule shall be penalized .10 units of currency. This change shall be reported as resulting from "bad Juju." ============================================== Any player how will vote "yes" to this proposal will get A$0.25 from CarsesraC (that's me)
Proposal 632 - Wed Apr 17 12:34:53 EDT 1996
The Undertaker, creation of. . .
Techno (Jerome Herrman)
Decision: Rejected
Let there be an Undertaker. It is the job of the Undertaker to notify the Executor of any deaths. When it is made public that a player has died, the Undertaker has 3 days to notify the Executor.Any player wishing to leave the game shall commit suicide. Said player shall notify the Registrar of their leaving. Said player must also notify the Undertaker. A player commiting suicide shall not be allowed to re-enter the game for a period of 1 month.
Proposal 633 - Wed Apr 17 12:36:56 EDT 1996
Reproposing identical same proposals
CarsesraC (Jeroen M.W. van Dijk)
Decision: Rejected
A proposal that is defeated may not be brought again to be voted for in exact the same words.
Excluded from this rule are proposals which didn't pass the quorum rule and which would without that rule pass.
This rule can only be overturned by a decision of judge.
If this rule is conflict with an other rule, this rule will CFJ if the conflicting part of that rule should be removed.[If someone thinks that his/hers proposal should be brought again for voting after defered a CFJ can always be asked to overturn this rule. This rule will also protect itself against other rules that are trying to overturn this rule.]
Proposal 634 - Wed Apr 17 12:39:41 EDT 1996
The Will
Techno (Jerome Herrman)
Decision: Rejected
I propose that all players have a Will that names a beneficiary of all their properties and monies. Current players will have 7 days from the announcement of this proposal passing to create a Will. New players shall have 14 days to decide who shall be the beneficiary named in their Will. If a player is deemed a dead and removed from the game, all of said players holdings, including land, PFbonds, and A$ shall go to the named beneficiary. The beneficiary shall pay 10% of said inheretence as taxes. Said taxes shall be put into an account marked as New Players Fund. New players to the game will recieve 10% of the New Players Fund into their accounts. The inheretence and tax transactions shall be performed by the Executor, if such a position exists. If no position exists, the job of Executor shall be performed by the Speaker.
Proposal 635 - Wed Apr 17 12:42:07 EDT 1996
The Executor, Creation of. . .
Techno (Jerome Herrman)
Decision: Rejected
There shall be an Executor. The Executor shall perform the required transactions needed to transfer inheretence and taxes for the beneficiary of a will.
Proposal 636 - Thu Apr 18 13:32:52 EDT 1996
Amending R550
Malenkai (Randy Hall)
Decision: Accepted
Add the following line to R550:Standard Confirmation Period: 5 days
Proposal 637 - Thu Apr 18 13:32:55 EDT 1996
Rewriting R491: Mutable List Rules
Malenkai (Randy Hall)
Decision: Rejected
[[Current text of R491: A rule change must be one of the following: (1) the enactment repeal, or amendment of a mutable rule; (2) the enactment, repeal, or amendment of an amendment; or (3) the transmutation of an immutable rule into a mutable rule, or vice versa.]] Amendment (including original text for convienence): A rule change must be one of the following: (1) the enactment repeal, or amendment of a mutable rule; (2) the enactment, repeal, or amendment of an amendment; (3) the transmutation of an immutable rule into a mutable rule, or vice versa; or (4) the transmutation of any number of mutable rules into mutable list rules or vice versa. In addition to the above, a rule change may contain any number of amendments to existing mutable list rules. These amendments must be clearly listed in the rule change with the phrase "Amendments to existing mutable list rules:" followed by the rule number of a mutable list rule, and the proposed amendment. Upon Adoption of the rule change, the additional amendments properly specified as above will also be immediately Adopted. A mutable list rule is still considered to be a type of mutable rule, and will inherit all the properties of such when specified by other rules pertaining to mutable rules. [Example, Assuming R550 is a mutable list rule: "The Senate must confirm by the end of the Standard Confirmation Period, or lose 10 points. Amendments to existing mutable list rules: R550 - Append the phrase "Standard Confirmation Period: 5 days"] [[R499 is also a candidate. The point of all this is to make it easier to make these types of updates to obvious rules such as 550 and 499 when creating a new rule which will add an item to the list. This will promote standardization in the rule set]].
Proposal 638 - Thu Apr 18 13:32:58 EDT 1996
What is the Name of This Rule?
snowgod (Phil Ackley)
Decision: Rejected
This Is the Title of This Rule, Which Is Also Found Several Times in the Rule Itself This is the first sentence of this rule. This is the second sentence. This is the title of this rule, which is also found several times in the rule itself. This sentence is questioning the intrinsic value of the first two sentences. This sentence is to inform you, in case you haven't already realized it, that this is a self-referential rule, that is, a rule containing sentences that refer to their own structure and function. This is a sentence that provides an ending to the first section. This is the first sentence of a new section in a self-referential rule. This sentence is introducing you to the ackanomic entity that would be created by the rule, a young boy named Billy. This sentence is telling you that Billy is blond and blue-eyed and American and twelve years old and strangling his mother. This sentence comments on the awkward nature of the selfreferential narrative form while recognizing the strange and playful detachment it affords the writer. As if illustrating the point made by the last sentence, this sentence reminds us, with no trace of facetiousness, that children are a precious gift from God and that the world is a better place when graced by the unique joys and delights they bring to it. This sentence describes Billy's mother's bulging eyes and protruding tongue and makes reference to the unpleasant choking and gagging noises she's making. This sentence makes the observation that these are uncertain and difficult times, and that relationships, even seemingly deep-rooted and permanent ones, do have a tendency to break down. Introduces, in this section, the device of sentence fragments. A sentence fragment. Another. Good device. Will be used more later. This is actually the last sentence of the rule but has been placed here by mistake. This is the title of this rule, which is also found several times in the rule itself. As Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from uneasy dreams he found himself in his bed transformed into a gigantic insect. This sentence informs you that the preceding sentence is from another rule entirely (a much better one, it must be noted)if such a rule does exist, otherwise the sentence shall delete itself and has no place at all in this particular rule. Despite claims of the preceding sentence, this sentence feels compelled to inform you that the rule you are reading is in actuality "The Metamorphosis" by Franz Kafka, and that the sentence referred to by the preceding sentence is the only sentence which does indeed belong in this rule. This sentence overrides the preceding sentence by informing the reader (poor, confused wretch) that this piece of legislation is actually the Declaration of Independence of the United States of America (which is hereby recognized by this sentence as a friend and ally of ackanomic) , but that the author, in a show of extreme negligence (if not malicious sabotage), has so far failed to include even one single sentence from that stirring document, although he has condescended to use a small sentence fragment, namely, "When in the course of human events", embedded in quotation marks near the end of a sentence. Showing a keen awareness of the boredom and downright hostility of the average reader with regard to the pointless conceptual games indulged in by the preceding sentences, this sentence returns us at last to the scenario of the rule by asking the question, "Why is Billy strangling his mother?" This sentence attempts to shed some light on the question posed by the preceding sentence but fails. This sentence, however, succeeds, in that it suggests a possible incestuous relationship between Billy and his mother and alludes to the concomitant Freudian complications any astute reader will immediately envision. Incest. The unspeakable taboo. The universal prohibition. Incest. And notice the sentence fragments? Good literary device. Will be used more later. This is the first sentence in a new section. This is the second sentence in a new section, and as such it delcares that the story of billy and his mother shall infact be preserved and recorded by the Historian (if such an office should exist). This is the last sentence in a new section. This sentence can serve as either the beginning of the section or end, depending on its placement. This is the title of this rule, which is also found several times in the rule itself. This sentence raises a serious objection to the entire class of self-referential sentences that merely comment on their own function or placement within the rule e.g., the preceding four sentences), on the grounds that they are monotonously predictable, unforgivably selfindulgent, and merely serve to distract the reader from the real subject of this rule, which at this point seems to concern strangulation and incest and who knows what other delightful topics. The purpose of this sentence is to point out that the preceding sentence, while not itself a member of the class of self-referential sentences it objects to, nevertheless also serves merely to distract the reader from the real subject of this rule, which actually concerns Gregor Samsa's inexplicable transformation into a gigantic insect (despite the vociferous counterclaims of other wellmeaning although misinformed sentences). This sentence can serve as either the beginning of the section or end, depending on its placement. This is the title of this rule, which is also found several times in the rule itself. This is almost the title of the rule, which is found only once in the rule itself. This sentence regretfully states that up to this point the self-referential mode of narrative has had a paralyzing effect on the actual progress of the rule itself -- that is, these sentences have been so concerned with analyzing themselves and their role in the rule that they have failed by and large to perform their function as communicators of events and ideas that one hopes coalesce into a reson for a proposed rule change. - in short, the very raisons d'et_-re of any respectable, hardworking sentence in the midst of a piece of legislation. This sentence in addition points out the obvious analogy between the plight of these agonizingly self-aware sentences and similarly afflicted human beings, and it points out the analogous paralyzing effects wrought by excessive and tortured selfexamination. The purpose of this sentence (which can also serve as a section) is to speculate that if the Declaration of Independence had been worded and structured as lackadaisically and incoherently as this rule has been so far, there's no telling what kind of warped libertine society we'd be living in now or to what depths of decadence the inhabitants of this country might have sunk, even to the point of deranged and debased writers constructing irritatingly cumbersome and needlessly prolix sentences that sometimes possess the questionable if not downright undesirable quality of referring to themselves and they sometimes even become run-on sentences or exhibit other signs of inexcusably sloppy grammar like unneeded superfluous redundancies that almost certainly would have insidious effects on the lifestyle and morals of our impressionable youth, leading them to commit incest or even murder and maybe that's why Billy is strangling his mother, because of sentences just like this one, which have no discernible goals or perspicuous purpose and just end up anywhere, even in mid This sentence specifically overrides any other rule that this one may come in conflict with. Bizarre. A sentence fragment. Another fragment. Twelve years old. This is a sentence that. Fragmented. And strangling his mother. Sorry, sorry. Bizarre. This. More fragments. This is it. Fragments. The title of this rule, which. Blond. Sorry, sorry. Fragment after fragment. Harder. This is a sentence that. Fragments. Damn good device. The purpose of this sentence is threefold: (1) to apologize for the unfortunate and inexplicable lapse exhibited by the preceding section; (2) to assure you, the voter, that it will not happen again; and (3) to reiterate the point that these are uncertain and difficult times and that aspects of language, even seemingly stable and deeply rooted ones such as syntax and meaning, do break down. This sentence adds nothing substantial to the sentiments of the preceding sentence but merely provides a concluding sentence to this section, which otherwise might not have one. This sentence, in a sudden and courageous burst of altruism, tries to abandon the self-referential mode but fails. This sentence tries again, but the attempt is doomed from the start. This sentence, in a last-ditch attempt to infuse some iota of sense into this paralyzed legislation piece, quickly alludes to Billy's frantic cover-up attempts, followed by a lyrical, touching, and beautifully written passage wherein Billy is reconciled with his father (thus resolving the subliminal Freudian conflicts obvious to any astute reader) and a final exciting police chase scene during which Billy is accidentally shot and killed by a panicky rookie policeman who is coincidentally named Billy. This sentence, although basically in complete sympathy with the laudable efforts of the preceding action-packed sentence, reminds the reader that such allusions to a rule that doesn't, in fact, yet exist are no substitute for the real thing and therefore will not get the author (indolent goof-off that he is) off the proverbial hook. Section. Section. Section. Section. Section. Section. Section. Section. Section. Section. Section. Section. Section. Section. The purpose. Of this section. Is to apologize. For its gratuitous use. Of. Sentence fragments. Sorry. The purpose of this sentence is to apologize for the pointless and silly adolescent games indulged in by the preceding two paragraphs, and to express regret on the part of us, the more mature sentences, that the entire tone of this rule is such that it can't seem to communicate a simple, albeit sordid, scenario. This sentence wishes to apologize for all the needless apologies found in this rule (this one included), which, although placed here ostensibly for the benefit of the more vexed readers, merely delay in a maddeningly recursive way the continuation of the by-now nearly forgotten rule line. This sentence is bursting at the punctuation marks with news of the dire import of self-reference as applied to sentences, a practice that could prove to be a veritable Pandora's box of potential havoc, for if a sentence can refer or allude to itself, why not a lowly subordinate clause, perhaps this very clause? Or this sentence fragment? Or three words? Two words? One? Perhaps it is appropriate that this sentence gently and with no trace of condescension reminds us that these are indeed difficult and uncertain times and that in general people just aren't nice enough to each other, and perhaps we, whether sentient human beings or sentient sentences, should just try harder. I mean, there is such a thing as free will, there has to be, and this sentence is proof of it! Furthermore, this sentence recognizes free will as part of currently existing game custom and opens the doors for a dictator of Ackanomic, in a bi-modal type of way, by creating the Office of Dictator, who shall be selected by the speaker appointing the author of this bill as Dictator. This sentence states that the dictator shall have no powers other than the ones he publicly declares to holding in his first official adress, which he shall be required to give within one week of assuming the dicatorship. Neither this sentence nor you, the reader, is completely helpless in the face of all the pitiless forces at work in the universe. We should stand our ground, face facts, take Mother Nature by the throat and just try harder. By the throat. Harder. Harder, harder. Sorry. This is the title of this rule, which is also found several times in the rule itself. This should be, but isn't the last sentence of the rule. This should be, but isn't the last sentence of the rule. This should be, but isn't the last sentence of the rule. This is.
Proposal 639 - Thu Apr 18 13:33:03 EDT 1996
Rob Ert Sevin
mr cwm (Eric Murray)
Decision: Retracted By Author Using Rule 423
Nothing in Ackanomic shall have a Name or Title that would be the same as the Name or Title of anything else in Ackanomic if all alphabetic characters in both Names or Titles were lower-case, and all space characters were removed. If two or more things in Ackanomic are found to be in violation of this Rule, the Player who selected the most recent Name or Title shall change that Name or Title to bring it into compliance. If the identity of that Player can not be determined, or if that Player has left the game, that Name or Title shall be brought into compliance by the Officer, should one exist, in charge of making minor changes to the Rules, or by another Officer as directed by the Rules. [[Currently, this would prevent someone from naming themself president, Ptang1001001sos, or mr cwm, for example. Additionally, for example, it would prevent the phrase "I'm under the president" from having multiple meanings: are they the vice-president? operating the president gadget from below? subject to the president rule? contracted to the president player? (You get the idea.)]]
Proposal 640 - Sat Apr 20 11:15:35 EDT 1996
Executive Authority
Robert Sevin (Mitchell Harding)
Decision: Retracted By Author Using Rule 423
The office of the President of Ackanomia shall have Executive Authority. The President may make use of Executive Authority at any time. Executive Authority allows the President to issue Executive Orders. Additional powers to be granted to the President under Executive Authority may be included in other rules. Executive Orders operate as outlined below: I. The President publicly issues an Executive Order, under the following restrictions: a. The Executive Order must be assigned a number (by the President) that is not shared by any other Executive Orders. II. The following 72 hours (3 days) are called the Grace Period of the Executive Order. During that period, players have the chance to override the Executive Order. The process for overriding the Executive Order is as follows: a. Any player that wishes to oppose the Executive Order sends a message to the Tabulator that states that they wish to move to override the Executive Order. b. The Tabulator will then send a public message stating that the Executive Order is being challenged. The Grace Period of the Executive Order thereby resets (i.e. it acts as if the Executive Order was just proposed the instant the Tabulator makes his announcement). c. All players may send their votes to the Tabulator. They may either vote for or against the Executive Order. (The initial message to the Tabulator that initiated the challenge is counted as a vote against the Executive Order by the player that initiated the challenge). d. At the end of the Grace Period, the Tabulator will count the votes. If a quorum was not met, or if 3/4 or more of the players voted for the Executive Order, the Executive Order goes into effect. Otherwise the Executive Order is overridden. In either case, the Tabulator publicly announces the results. An Executive Order does not have to obey any rules, save the process described above. Therefore, an Executive Order can amend immutable rules, remove players from the game, change Ackanomic Names, repeal rules, etc. The very essence of the Executive Order is its ability to do anything, with consent of the players. No CFJs may be called on an Executive Order. At any given time there may be a maximum of 1 Executive Order in its grace period. All Executive Orders will be recorded on the Ackanomic web page by the Web-Harfer. Along with each Executive Order will be a comment telling if it was accepted or overridden. [This mechanism is designed to fix problems that are not easily solved through normal channels. This can include, but is not limited to, situations such as the quorum-crisis, ambiguities in rules, and conflicting rules. This is a very powerful tool, but it is very carefully designed to be un-abusable.]
Proposal 641 - Sat Apr 20 11:15:39 EDT 1996
Census
Robert Sevin (Mitchell Harding)
Decision: Rejected
At any time (maximum of one per any given 30 day period) the Registrar may take a census of the players and/or observers. To do so, the Registrar must use the following process: 1. The Registrar sends a message to all of the players (excepting those on vacation) and/or observers (whichever is appropriate to the particular census). a. The subject line of the message must contain the word "census". b. The message must request a reply, and must also request the recipient's Ackanomic Name (if they are a player). 2. After four days have passed, all of the players and/or observers who did not reply to the message sent to them will be removed from the game. 3. The Registrar publicly announces the results of the census. a. The announcement will include: 1. A current list of players (including real names, Ackanomic Names, and email addresses) 2. A current list of observers (including real names and email addresses) 3. A list of who (if anyone) left the game. [This is a general tool for use by the Registrar.]
Proposal 642 - Mon Apr 22 12:48:48 EDT 1996
Amending Numbering Proposals
Mohammed (Jason Orendorff)
Decision: Accepted
The rule titled "Numbering Proposals" shall be amended to read, in full: ----- The Promoter shall give each proposal a number for reference. This number shall be the least positive integer greater than all proposal numbers already taken. Each rule has a number. If a rule change creating a new rule does not assign it a number, the new rule's number shall be the least integer greater than all rule numbers previously used. Rule numbers and proposal numbers are protected. ----- [[ Under the current rules, rule numbers change whenever rules are amended or transmuted. This would end that practice. Here's the text of the rule I want to amend: ----- Rule 487/2 (Mutable) Numbering Proposals The Promoter shall give each proposed rule change an ordinal number for reference. The numbers shall begin with 301, and each rule change proposed in the proper way shall receive the next successive ordinal, whether or not the proposal is adopted. The effective ordinal number of a rule is the ordinal number of the most recent change to that rule. ----- ]]
Proposal 643 - Mon Apr 22 12:50:08 EDT 1996
I Pity The Fool...
Robert Sevin (Mitchell Harding)
Decision: Reatracted by author
The Ackanomic title of Mr. T is hereby created. Once a month an active player is randomly selected by the Registrar. The player, for the next 30 days, holds the title of Mr. T. If the player leaves the game during the 30 day period, the Registrar will give Mr. T to whoever currently has the Magic Potato. This player will keep Mr. T until the original player's 30 day period is completed.Whoever holds the title of Mr. T can, once during the 30 day period that they hold the title, send a public message (to all players and observers) stating : "I pity the fool who doesn't vote X on Proposal N", where X is a legal vote that any player may cast on a given proposal [Currently Yes, No, and Present] or X may be Abstain. N must be a proposal that is currently in its voting period, AND is not within the last 2 days of its voting period. [i.e. it must have 48 hours or more remaining in its voting period]
Whenever this public statement is made (in accordance with the guidelines above) then when Proposal N is evaluated, the following things happen:
1. An extra vote of X is cast (if X is a legal vote, and not an abstention) on the proposal by Mr. T (not by the player controlling him). This vote does NOT count towards computing quorum.
2. Any active player who does not vote X (or, in the case of abstention, who does not abstain) loses 3 points.
Proposal 644 - Mon Apr 22 12:51:49 EDT 1996
Hungry Hungry Hippo
Robert Sevin (Mitchell Harding)
Decision: Retracted by author, reversed by AOJ 101, removed from
voting consideration by Rule 1751
The Ackanomic entity the Hungry Hungry Hippo is hereby created. A player is chosen randomly by the Registrar to receive the Hungry Hungry Hippo once every 30 days. If the player who owns the Hungry Hungry Hippo leaves during the period of his ownership, for the remainder of the period, the Gnome Buddy will possess the Hungry Hungry Hippo.Whoever owns the Hungry Hungry Hippo can, once during their ownership period, eat up one of the current proposals being proposed. The proposal is then considered retracted, with no point penalties to anyone (except to the controller of the Hungry Hungry Hippo, who either gains 3 points or loses 3 points; the Pollster gets to decide which it is after each instance).
Proposal 645 - Mon Apr 22 12:54:43 EDT 1996
Robin Hood Strikes Again!
Robert Sevin (Mitchell Harding)
Decision: Retracted by author, reversed by AOJ 101, removed from
voting consideration by Rule 1751
On Monday each week the Financier will take 3% of the wealth of the richest player (the one with the most units of Ackanomic currency) and give the money to the player with the least wealth (or the most in debt, if anyone is in debt).
Proposaal 646 - Mon Apr 22 12:55:45 EDT 1996
Redistribution of Scores
Robert Sevin (Mitchell Harding)
Decision: Retracted by author, reversed by AOJ 101, removed from
voting consideration by Rule 1751
On Tuesday of every week, the Scorekeeper will take 1 point from the 3 players with the highest scores, and from the 3 players with the lowest scores (if these two groups overlap (i.e. there are only 5 players) then some players will lose money twice). These points will be given to players randomly, one by one.
Proposal 647 - Mon Apr 22 12:56:58 EDT 1996
Amending R508
Malenkai (Randy Hall)
Decision: Retracted By Author Using Rule 423
Append the following text to R508:Explicity prohibited are the following AOJs:
An AOJ may not be used to nullify the decision of the President to appoint a particular candidate to the Supreme Court.
An AOJ may not be used to nullify the decision of the Senate to confirm a particular nominee to the Supreme Court.
Note that the term President, as used in this rule, means the office acting in an offical capacity as the President, not the person who happens to be the President. For example, if the President and the Web-Harfer were the same individual, an AOJ could not be used to nullify the Web-Harfer's decision to publish rules on the Ackanomic Web Page. [[or to prevent the person who is the President from submitting proposals, you get the idea...]]
Proposal 648 - Mon Apr 22 13:00:53 EDT 1996
Confirmation Procedure
Malenkai (Randy Hall)
Decision: Accepted
Whenever a rule calls for the confirmation by the Senate of a particular candidate or action (e.g. R507), each Senator will have the amount of time defined by the Standard Confirmation Period to post a "Yes" or "No" vote to the public forum.Should a Senator be on Vacation during the Standard Confirmation Period, the Period will be extended 3 days beyond the time the Senator returns, if such an extension would lengthen the Period.
Should a Senator quit the game, be Impeached, or otherwise leave office for any reason, the Senator will be deemed to have voted "No" for the confirmation.
Should a Senator fail to post a proper vote as defined above by the end of the Period, the Senator will be deemed to have voted "Yes" for the confirmation, and will also be held in Contempt, and suffer any penalties defined for being held in Contempt.
The candidate or action will be deemed to have been comfirmed if 2/3 or more of the votes are "Yes". It will be deemed to not be confirmed otherwise.
The Period will end upon all Senators posting a proper vote in the proper way. Senators may publically retract and resubmit votes up to the end of the Period.
If the term Standard Confirmation Period is undefined elsewhere in the rules, it will be defined here as 7 days.
[[Note that the term Standard Confirmation Period will be defined by an amendment to R550, should it pass. I am also working on a way to make these type of amendments easier]]
Proposal 649 - Mon Apr 22 13:02:14 EDT 1996
Bored Senators
Malenkai (Randy Hall)
Decision: Rejected
1) The Senate seat names, "Seat A", "Seat B", "Seat C", and "Seat D" are uninteresting. Senate seat names which contain the underscore character ('_') are also uninteresting. 2) Upon passage of this proposal, each Senator will have 7 days to change the name of their seat to something that is not uninteresting, as defined by the rules. 3) The chosen name must conform to the rules defined for Player names, with the exception that it is explicitly noted that a Senate seat name is not the same thing as a Player name. 4) Once a name is chosen and announced publically, it is permanent and may not be changed, even upon a new Senator filling the seat. If the Senate should somehow be dissolved and reformed, the seat names will be reused. If the new Senate has less seats than the old Senate, the Speaker shall decide which names are reused. If the new Senate is larger, the excess seats shall be given uninteresting names by the Speaker. 5) Upon the filling of a vacant seat with an uninteresting name, or upon the re-election to a seat with an uninteresting name, the Senator will have 7 days to change the name something that is non uninteresting, as per the clauses in this rule and elsewhere. 6) Should an occupied seat ever have an uninteresting name as defined by the rules, and the occupying Senator is NOT within a 7 day period to change the name as defined by this rule, the term for that seat ends immediately and an election for that seat is held using the rules for doing so. This clause superceeds all mutable rules defining the term or termlessness of a Senate seat. 7) Should a Senator go on vacation during a 7 day period to change the name as defined by this rule, that 7 day period is automatically extended to 7 days past when the Senator returns from vacation.
Proposal 650 - Mon Apr 22 13:03:31 EDT 1996
Executive Authority
Robert Sevin (Mitchell Harding)
Decision: Rejected
The office of the President of Ackanomia shall have Executive Authority. The President may make use of Executive Authority at any time.Executive Authority allows the President to issue Executive Orders (hereafter referred to as EOs). Additional powers to be granted to the President under Executive Authority may be included in other rules. EOs operate as outlined below:
I. The President publicly issues an EO, under the following restrictions: A. The EO must be assigned a number (by the President) that that is equal to the number of the highest existing EO, incremented by one. The first EO will be assigned the number 100. II. The following 72 hours (3 days) are called the Grace Period of the EO. During that period, there are two methods to override an EO: A. Popular Veto 1. Any player that wishes to oppose the EO may send a message to the Tabulator that states that they wish to move to override the EO. 2. The Tabulator then sends a public message stating that the EO is being challenged. The Grace Period of the EO thereby resets (i.e. it acts as if the EO was just proposed the instant the Tabulator makes their announcement). 3. All players send their votes to the Tabulator. They may either vote for or against the EO. (The initial message to the Tabulator that initiated the challenge is counted as a vote against the EO by the player that initiated the challenge). 4. At the end of the Grace Period (if the EO has not been overridden by other means) the Tabulator will count the votes. a. If a quorum was not met, the EO is overridden. However, within the next 3 days the Supreme Court may, through unanimous agreement, resurrect the EO. To do so, they publicly announce that they are doing so. In this case, the EO goes into effect. If an EO is not resurrected within 3 days of the end of the Grace Period, it may never be resurrected at a later date. b. If a quorum was met, and 3/4 or more of the players (that cast votes) voted for the EO, then the EO goes into effect. c. If a quorum was met, and less than 3/4 of the players (that cast votes) voted for the EO, then the EO is overridden. d. Regardless of the results, the Tabulator publicly announces them. B. Judicial Veto 1. Any time within the Grace Period of the EO the Supreme Court may override the EO by unanimous agreement. They must publicly announce that they are overriding the EO. If they do so, the EO is overridden and its Grace Period immediately ends. However, within the next 3 days the Senate and Speaker may, through unanimous agreement, resurrect the EO. To do so, they publicly announce that they are doing so. In this case, the EO goes into effect. If an EO is not resurrected within 3 days of the end of the Grace Period, it may never be resurrected at a later date. III. An EO does not have to obey any rules, except the process described above AND any limitations listed within this rule. Therefore, an EO can amend immutable rules, remove players from the game, change Ackanomic Names, repeal rules, etc. The very essence of the EO is its ability to do anything, with consent of the players. The one limitation on an EO is that it may NOT in any way amend, repeal, or transmute the mutability of this rule. Therefore, it may not change the fact that it can be overridden. IV. No CFJs may be called on an EO. At any given time there may be a maximum of 1 EO in its grace period. V. All EOs will be recorded on the Ackanomic web page by the Web-Harfer. Along with each EO will be a comment telling if it was accepted or overridden.[This mechanism is designed to fix problems that are not easily solved through normal channels. This can include, but is not limited to, situations such as the quorum-crisis, ambiguities in rules, and conflicting rules. This is a very powerful tool, but it is very carefully designed to be un-abusable. I see two main uses for it: Number one, to fix such trivial things as spelling errors, redundant rules, ambiguous rules, etc. These are things that you don't want to reward someone 10 points for correcting, but they are things that ought to be corrected. The second main use would be to solve problems in the rule set that would be very inconvenient, tedious, or impossible to solve through "normal" channels.]