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Author Message
25 new of 203 responses total.
jep
response 150 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 13:59 UTC 1999

*Much* closer than I expected.
scott
response 151 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 16:50 UTC 1999

Me too.  I was expecting a wider spread.
scg
response 152 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 16:56 UTC 1999

Not to stir up more dissent or anything, but I've got a bit of concern about
the voting process.

TS brought up a concern a few years ago about the vote program keeping track
of individual users' votes, and therefore not being an effective secret
ballot.  At the time this was explained as something internal to the vote
program, necessary for the vote program's operation, and not something any
humans would ever see, and given that explanation I thought TS was rather off
the deep end to keep complaining about it.  Now, however, I'm concerned. 
We've gone ahead and posted an unofficial count, subject to revision after
we find out if any revisions to the membership roles are needed.  Let's say
we discover that we have one new member, or one former member who is no longer
eligible, and run the vote counting program again with the new, accurate,
membership list.  The vote count changes by one.  Hmm... whose vote could that
be?

I'm not bothered about this for myself.  I think I made it pretty clear how
I was going to vote on this issue.  However, this seems like something we
ought to avoid if we're going to claim to have a secret ballot.
don
response 153 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 17:47 UTC 1999

Since all of the voters are part of gid 80 ("voters"), why not just set
the vote program with 710 perms, and make sure the member list is updated
before the polls open (not too hard, given the sporadicity of member
votes)? That way, there won't be any problems with loss of anonymity. If
you wanted to keep the non-member poll, you could simply duplicate the
voter program and place a script which will check for the gid 80 and
execute the proper program accordingly.
aruba
response 154 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 18:28 UTC 1999

The problem with that, Don, is that people may become members in the 
middle of the voting period, or may renew their membership in the 
middle.  Our policy has always been (as Jan said in resp:148) that 
members' votes count if they were members during any part of the voting 
period.  I always update the voters group at the end of the vote (or 
right before it's counted, anyway) so that it contains exactly those 
people.  (There are normally a few people in there who shouldn't be, 
because they are overdue with their dues, so they need to be taken out.)

I am glad the proposal failed, but a little disappointed that so many 
people voted for it.  I hope everyone who did so will weigh in with 
their ideas for what procedure we should put in place of the one the 
board instituted.
janc
response 155 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 18:46 UTC 1999

In hindsight, I think Steve is right.  The list of voters is in a publically
readable file, so that if we report election results before and after
adjusting the file, it is theoretically possible to tell how those adjusted
people voted.  We shouldn't have done this.  But I didn't think of this at
the time.

As it happens we lucked out.  I've now done the adjustment to the voters
group, and about half a dozen people changed status.  I don't think anyone
will be able to extract much information about who voted in what way in this
particular case just because of the large number of changes. Still, the best
procedure might not be to report the revised numbers unless they change the
outcome.  Or maybe not.  I don't know.
scg
response 156 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 19:31 UTC 1999

The final count seems to me to be an important matter of public record.  I
don't think not releasing it would be a good idea.  Probably if anybody had
strongly objected to the planned release of the preliminary numbers, the time
to object would have been before they were released.
remmers
response 157 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 20:14 UTC 1999

Steve and Jan are right - under certain circumstances, know the tallies
both before and after changes would compromise secrecy. I didn't think
of that, and won't do it again. Sorry about that. (This situation has
never come up before.)

Now that Jan's updated the voter list, I'll go tally the official
totals. Stay tuned...
remmers
response 158 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 20:27 UTC 1999

Okay, slight change in the totals - 2 fewer yes votes, same number of no
votes. Final tally:

        14 Yes
        27 No

richard
response 159 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 22:08 UTC 1999

still the vote shows the membership was not nearly as unanimous as the
board was regarding this issue--  I think  it indicates the board
inaccurately guaged that there would have been a stronger consensus for
their action that there in fact was.  This is an argument for why there
should have been a member vote on the original resolution, regardless
of whether it would have passed.
mdw
response 160 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 22:09 UTC 1999

I think one reason so many people voted "yes" was because of the way
this proposal was worded.  This is a fine example of how parliementary
procedure can be abused, actually.
don
response 161 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 23 23:10 UTC 1999

Quote from #0:

    As a Grex member, I move that the following resolution, adopted by
    the Board on July 27, be rescinded:

    In the event that Michigan Public Act 33 of 1999 goes into effect,
    all public access to Grex shall be suspended, with the exception
    of an informational web page, pending the formulation of new policies.

Someone please tell me how this was worded to persuade people to vote yes,
and how this is an "abuse" of parliamentary procedure. I'm assuming that
Markus is using the same definition of "abuse" as NetHack does: a form pf
cheating that isn't expressly prevented / prohibited.

I think that the wording used (the stuff afterwards wasn't part of the
motion, rather it was advocacy) was as neutral as possible, and that the
"abuse" may have lied in the original resolution, since the way it was
recorded is a bit misleading in that it sounds worse than it is.

And I'm not trivializing the issue by comparing it to a game -- although
NH's definition has painted the clearest line I know of between abuse and
cheating.
steve
response 162 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 24 00:31 UTC 1999

   Richard, we didn't "inaccurately gauge" anything--we made a collective
decision.  However, given that the number of people who voted this down
was a 2:1 ratio, I don't feel that we did something that lots disagreed
with.  For one thing, more than half our members did not vote.  I also
agree with Marcus about the wording being confusing.  Negative logic always
done strange things.
mdw
response 163 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 24 13:35 UTC 1999

Wasn't the resolution, was worded, not a double negative?  In English, a
double negative is supposedly a positive, but en Francais, ce n'est pas
vrai.  Even in Shakespeare's time, a double negative meant something
different.

As worded, this resolution was very much taking something out of
context; the original measure passed by the board was concerning the
outcome of the preliminary hearing, and I don't think the board
necessarily expected that they should be bound by this measure with
regards to the outcome of the january hearing.

This resolution may also be unenforceable.  What we have done with this
court challenge, is we have basically asked if the MPA act can be
enforced against grex.  Everybody expects and hopes that this answer is
"no", and so far even the courts have agreed.  In the unlikely event
that the courts change their mind, though, this would cease to be true,
and we expect that if the courts do reverse their position, that they
will give us much more specific guidelines as to what we can & can't do.
In that case, those guidelines would tell us whether grex, as operated
today, were compliant with the law, or operating in reckless disregard
of the law.  If the latter were to be the case, the board might well
have no choice but to shut down, and since michigan law has precedence
over member resolutions, Dave's member resolution would not alter the
board's responsibility, implied and express, to uphold the law.

I'm a native english speaker, and reasonably well versed in logic, and
even I had to read this resolution very carefully, several times, to
convince myself that "no" was the answer most consistent with my opinion
on the matter.  I think many people not as well versed in the context of
this resolution might have had a much more difficult time deciding how
to vote; as worded, the resolution very much suggests that grex is in
danger of "shutting down" (an opinion on which anyone informed on the
matter would realize was a very unlikely outcome.)  The resolution also
doesn't convey any of the risks that not shutting down might mean, such
as possible seizure of the hardware, board members in prison, etc.  I
think it's very telling that the voting ratios amongst members and
non-members was quite different; it was quite clear that the
non-members, not as well versed in the matter, were more likely to vote
"yes".  Grex staff also got one message, from a non-member, who was very
confused about what the resolution meant--being a non-english speaker,
this person was having a lot of trouble parsing the logic of the
resolution to figure out what "yes" and "no" really meant.

This resolution in some ways typifies the worst features of RRO.  This
is the risk in any sort of parliementary process, that it can entangle
everyone up in irrelevant webs of nonsense that only interest people who
enjoy the process, and drive good people away away in disgust, while
real matters of importance don't get resolved.

I think this resolution really sent out the wrong messages to the grex
user population.  It portrays the board as "evil guys" bent on shutting
down grex, and implies that they somehow don't have the best interests
of grex in mind.  Evidently a lot of people saw through this, but it
also sends out a 2nd message, in some ways even more poisonous, that the
people involved in running grex get caught up in stupid and
time-consuming political arguments concerning irrelevant legal minutia.
None of these are healthy for grex.  We *want* people to think of the
board as being on their side.  We want people on the board to think that
they are serving the interests of the users, not acting in active
opposition to the users.  We want people to trust grex enough to send
grex money.  We want people to care enough about grex's future to get
involved in discussions on how grex should be run.  This is what grex
has always been about, and because it's really a pretty rare idea out
there in the natural order of things, we need to care and nurture this
idea, not seek to find ways to drive wedges inbetween the users, the
members, and the board.
jep
response 164 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 24 15:07 UTC 1999

The Board doesn't need to be *portrayed* as being on the side of users, 
Marcus, it needs to *be* on the side of users.  Dave's resolution was to 
address a case where he thought the Board was not on the side of users.  
Most people disagreed with Dave, but a big chunk thought the Board made 
a dumb or bad decision, one that was not in the best interests of 
Grex and it's users, and they voted to overturn it.

I'm not very comfortable with the spin-doctoring I see in this item, 
particularly from Marcus.  He's free to interpret things as he wishes, 
of course, but there's not much reason to agree with him.

#162 from STeve was dismissive.  It was wishful thinking, too.  (Turn it 
around -- out of 80-some eligible voters, only 27 chose to support the 
Board's decision.  That's as reasonable as discounting the votes of 14 
out of 41 who weighed in with an opinion.)

I don't think those who voted for the motion were all suckered by a 
double negative.  I think most of them can read reasonably well, and 
could clearly understand what they were voting for.  I believe that 
about those who voted 'no', too.  There was not even close to unanimous 
approval for the Board's decision.  In a user vote, I doubt very much if 
the voting members of Grex would have made the same decision the Board 
did about shutting down Grex.  
dpc
response 165 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 24 17:47 UTC 1999

Hm.  I don't see a double negative here, and the motion in #0 had
nothing to do with Robert's Rules of Order.  Maybe mdw's mother was
frightened by it.   8-)
        I'm also quite surprised at the outcome.  Of course, I could
buy Marcus' argument that folks were confused by the wording, in
which case I could say that most of the voters opposed what the
Board had done.  But making that argument would be wrong.
        Let's see.  If we add the members' and the non-members'
votes, together, then of all the Grex *users* who expressed an
opinion, the votes were:

To rescind the resolution:        14 + 67 = 81  (42%)
Not to rescind the resolution:    27 + 74 = 101 (58%)

The Board is certainly not evil.  42% of the users involved did,
however, feel that the Board needed a collective backbone transplant.
mdw
response 166 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 24 22:42 UTC 1999

Apparently, 42% of grex *users* felt it was quite reasonable to risk the
*board*'s backbone in defying the government.  Seems pretty heartless to
me.
gull
response 167 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 24 23:05 UTC 1999

Yup.  It's easy to stand on principles when you're not the person who might
get hauled into court.
jep
response 168 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 24 23:23 UTC 1999

I don't think it's fair to say that of dpc, who, as a member of the 
Board of Arbornet, made that decision.  I'm not sure it's fair to say it 
of anyone, since a lot of people are willing to be on the Board of Grex, 
and also because people do (and should) expect more of their leaders 
than others.
don
response 169 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 24 23:32 UTC 1999

re Markus, the motion was to riscind a resolution to suspend operations.
Rescind the resolution, no more suspension of operations. Even though I do
know some parliamentary procedure (Helps alot in Model UN), I didn't have to
think twice about what this meant. The only demographic who could have
problems would be the foreigners, and they make up a *very* small percentage
of the voting membership, and the margin was wide enough that they wouldn't
have made a difference if they had misconstrued the motion.
mdw
response 170 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 25 00:16 UTC 1999

We're not talking about arbornet here; we're talking about grex.  It's
one thing if the arbornet board feels a right to risk their own behinds;
that's their own business, and I applaud their courage and trust.  It's
another thing entirely for a user on grex to vote to risk the grex
board's behinds.  Of course, the way this resolution was worded, I don't
think many users had the least idea what they were basically asking was
that if the worse case analysis of the situation came to pan out, they
were voting that the grex board to go to prison on their behalf.

So far as what the motion & resolution meant, you *do* realize we're
getting into semantics here, don't you? I know from talking to various
board members that *all* they were thinking in terms of was the original
preliminary hearing.  While a lot of important stuff happens *at* such
hearings, the possible direct results of such hearings tend to be real
simple binary yes/no type stuff.  To attempt to construct any other
context for the interpretation of the board's resolution than this
context is I think not at all fair to the board.  While courts are not
noted for their speedy process, courts generally *are* much faster than
online debate, and one of the reasons we even bother with having a board
is to respond quickly to situations where it's just not practical to
convene the whole grex membership online and have them hash something
out.

The people on the grex board do make every attempt to communicate with
the grex membership and generally "do things right"; that's one of the
things the original board resolution was about.  They could certainly
have just left it as a "surprise decision" for the grex staff to do.
The staff would not have appreciated this at all, of course; so it's
good we didn't go there.  There's no question, though, that the grex
staff could have done this.  If the fire marshall stops by, inspects
grex, and announces it's a fire hazard and must be shut down at once,
"or else", grex staff will shut grex down.  We staff people would much
rather turn it off nicely, than have the fire marshall pull the plug for
us, and no, we don't need the board's authorization or the consent of
the membership to do what the firemarshall tells us, it's just not a
real choice in such a situation.  The grex board has the right to decide
policy in cases that are either too trivial to bother the membership
with, or that are too time critical to solve otherwise.  So, no, don't
try the argument that the membership somehow has the right to require
that the board or staff operate in defiance of the law.  It just ain't
gonna wash, it's a really stupid argument, and we have the express
opinion of "the membership" that clearly agrees.
jshafer
response 171 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 25 00:25 UTC 1999

This response has been erased.

jshafer
response 172 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 25 00:31 UTC 1999

I agree with most, if not all, of what Marcus has said, and find it 
laughable that JEP accuses him of "spin doctoring."
don
response 173 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 25 00:57 UTC 1999

I get the feeling Markus is getting pretty pissed now.... This may be
semantics, but then again your claim of using parliamentary procedure to
influence the motion is *also* semantics, and simple binary yes/no type stuff
can also be negated simply -- the negation (at least the decision to implement
it) is also a simple binary yes/no type thing, and its effect is also binary.
scg
response 174 of 203: Mark Unseen   Aug 25 03:26 UTC 1999

(Don -- He's Marcus, not Markus.
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