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Author Message
25 new of 186 responses total.
aruba
response 109 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 19 07:13 UTC 1996

Exactly - we shouldn't try to get evidence that people are who they say they
are unless we are willing to really follow through and make our ID practices
much more thorough than they are now.  I don't think we should do that, and
I don't see what it would accomplish to ask someone to prove that their
children exist.

In one case I can think of lately, we had a child who became a member using
a parent's ID, and then a few months after that the parent became a member
too, using the same ID.  I was, frankly, delighted, and I thought that was
pretty nifty.  Should I have turned around and asked the parent for more ID
just because that check had been used already?  It had her name on it, after
all (the parent's I mean).  I think that would have been rude and
inconveniencing.

I don't have a problem with two accounts sharing the same ID.  I don't think
we should go any farther that saying that we should simply have a different
real name associated with each account.  In fact, this whole thing could
probably have been avoided if I had just put "Magical Education Council of
Ann Arbor" in my table of members, where Kami's name is now.  I wasn't aware
until Steve pointed it out that the convocat account actually belonged to that
organization, and not to Kami herself.
srw
response 110 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 19 07:53 UTC 1996

My specific agenda is very simple. Many of us have been claiming, rightly I
believe, that Grex only permits one vote per person.

Our treasurer has kindly pointed out to us that it isn't so. We do allow a
person to vote more than one account. He will not enforce any such rule unless
there is a board vote.

Therefore I see a clear need for a board vote.

If we are not willing to ask the treasurer to enforce this rule, then we admit
that the rule is void, and we should no longer claim that we restrict
individual members to a single vote.

We have been discussing this here for quite a while, and I see no reason to
drag it out any longer. Everyone has had ample chance to air their views, and
the whole board is reading all this.

There remained the simple question of whether we require separate ID for each
member. The sentiment now appears to be that we should trust anyone buying
multiple accounts that the people s/he is buying them for do exist and will
control their own votes independently. I see no way acceptable to this group
by which to check up on that, so I give up. I don't see how that can become
part of any proposal we'd consider.

I specifically propose that the treasurer enforce the rule that says that we
allow no individual member to have more than one voting account.
srw
response 111 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 19 08:02 UTC 1996

Mark slipped in.

Having acquiesced on the question of trusting the purchaser of multiple
accounts to be buying them for separate individuals, I mostly go along with
all that

The problem I have with calling the "Magic Education Council" the owner of
convocat is that it is not a person. Only people can be members (according
to our bylaws). This is probably bad. But fixing it is a bylaw revision, and
another topic altogether. Definitely not what I'm proposing here.

Am I wrong on this? If we can establish that organization as the owner of
account convocat (using Kami's ID) then we do not have an existing violation
of the 1 person 1 vote convention. that would make me happy.
chelsea
response 112 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 19 15:44 UTC 1996

Maybe this difference of opinion has more to do with
semantics than philosophy.  Steve, what are you asking
the treasurer to do in order to "enforce" a one vote
per person policy?
dpc
response 113 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 19 22:02 UTC 1996

Let's not confuse "person" with "human being."  A "person" includes
a corporation or other association; a "human being" or an "individual"
refers to a biological entity.  Do I want to know what the bylaws
say?  No.
        Both organizations and human beings should be allowed to have
Grex accounts.  Of course organizations can only act through human
beings, but organizations have an existence separate from the human
beings who act for them.
davel
response 114 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 20 10:39 UTC 1996

Let's not confuse that particular legal fiction with reality.  A person is
a human being.

That does *not* necessarily have any bearing on whether organizations should
be able to have Grex accounts, however.
kerouac
response 115 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 20 16:22 UTC 1996

If a person wants more votes on a board of some company, he/she
buys more stock/.  I dont think there should be a limit on how
many memberships one person can buy or if they wish to vote with all
or none of thosememberships.
e4808mc
response 116 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 20 16:29 UTC 1996

This is not a stock corporation.  This is a membership non-profit, set up to
run cooperatively.  No one person is expected to be more *or less* powerful
than another, just because of the amount of money they can, or cannot, invest
here.  
Please stick to reality.  
scg
response 117 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 20 16:34 UTC 1996

Richard, aren't you also the person who insists that everybody should be able
to vote, regardless of whether they have a membership?  How do you reconcile
your two positions?
kerouac
response 118 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 20 17:09 UTC 1996

#117...easily...if everyone could vote, then the multiple member
question would be moot.  People here are too paranoid about voter fraud.
This is a little place not a large country.  If there were 
10,000 people voting instead of fifty or a hundred, maybe such
concerns would be validated.
aruba
response 119 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 20 18:21 UTC 1996

I'm hoping this new thread won't distract Steve from answering Mary's question 
in #112.
rcurl
response 120 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 20 20:41 UTC 1996

Re #114: there is no "should" about it - organizations can and do have
Grex accounts. Do you mean, be "members" of some type?
davel
response 121 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 21 10:41 UTC 1996

Um, yes, Rane, I meant memberships.  I followed dpc's wording in #113
slavishly, without thinking.
dpc
response 122 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 22 01:23 UTC 1996

Gee, it's nice to have a slave.   8-)
srw
response 123 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 25 06:47 UTC 1996

Nothing could possibly stop me from answering Mary's question, although
my answer was delayed because I have not had the time to get back to this item
until now.

The treasurer associates the name of the responsible individual with each
membership account. My idea of enforcement is that if more than one account is
associated with the same individual, then only one should be voting. Since
it is the Treasurer whose job it is to assign accounts to the group "voters",
it is he who must enforce this rule.

When this thread began, both accounts "kami" and "convocat" were associated
with the same individual. "convocat" was not listed as being owned by the
Magic Education Council. There is some question whether an organization can
own a membership account, and I hope to have that resolved. I agree with dpc
and others that it *should* be permitted.

It is my understanding from the board meeting that the name on the convocat
account will be changed to its correct owner, "Magic Education Council". We
accepted their membership fees and made them a voting account, whether that
was correct or not. I am not interested in forcing them to give it up.
Hopefully we will specifically correct any omission that prevents memberships
from going to organizations.

Meanwhile, I am happy with this as we no longer are recognizing a single
individual as having two voting accounts. I would hope we would never do that
again. If we can't agree to make it legit for voting memberships to be owned
by organizations, then future organizational accounts should be of the
non-voting type, including convocat when it next renews.

I have given up any attempt to ask for ID when buying memberships for family.
If one person wants to buy memberships for everyone in his or her family, I
am willing to let them do so without proving the existence of those people,
so long as a separate name is assigned to each account. On the other hand if
the request appears to be suspicious to the Treasurer, I would have no
objection if he asked for confirmation that the people exist.
chelsea
response 124 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 25 14:56 UTC 1996

Thanks for the clarification, Steve.  I am very surprised that
an organization was ever given voting rights.  The Bylaws do
not allow this.  I too would like to see organizations given
memberships as long as we won't get into refusing any organization
membership status and no voting rights go along with group status. 
kerouac
response 125 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 25 17:31 UTC 1996

#124...the bylaws say that any member in good standing has voting 
rights.  It does not say "any member in good standing who is an 
individual and not an organization" has voting rights.  To say flat out 
that the bylaws do not allow an organization voting rights is not true. 
The bylaws do not say that an organization cannot itself be a member, 
and they do not say that any paying member for any reason should be 
excluded from voting.
scg
response 126 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 25 17:47 UTC 1996

Right, by tI think the bylaws do define a member as a person.
janc
response 127 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 25 18:29 UTC 1996

I think we need to amend the bylaws to create a separate member-like catagory
for organizations that support Grex.  It's not really worth debating what the
current bylaws mean, since I think we should change them no matter what they
say.

Specifically, I think the rules should go something like this:

  - Members must be individuals, not organizations.

  - We create a new class called "benefactors" or something.

  - Benefactors can be groups corporations or individuals.  They do not
    need to be validated.

  - Being a benefactor does not by itself confer any special access on Grex,
    but all benefactors will be acknowledged on a list of benefactors.
    (Note we leave it open that some benefactors may get more, so the board
    has at least the option of making different kinds of deals with outside
    organization.)

  - Benefactor donations can be in the form of goods and services.  Thus
    IC-Net is probably already a benefactor.  (This opens some cans of
    worms that may not be worth getting into (eg, are all the fairwitnesses
    benefactors because of the time they donate?), so maybe it's a bad idea.
    Maybe the bylaws should just say that you can become a benefactor by
    donating $100 in the current year or by being named so by the board, thus
    leaving non-cash ways of being benefactors undefined.)
tsty
response 128 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 25 18:46 UTC 1996

is that reconcilable with the law(s) that make corporations "people?"
kerouac
response 129 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 25 18:50 UTC 1996

But would "Benefactors" get the usual member perks (other than 
voting?)
aruba
response 130 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 25 20:11 UTC 1996

I have indeed changed the name on the account "convocat" to be The Magical
Education Council of Ann Arbor.
dang
response 131 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 25 21:00 UTC 1996

This item is linked to coop 9
rcurl
response 132 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 25 22:18 UTC 1996

You don't need to amend the bylaws to create a non-member designation like
Benefactors (I'd start with Supporters, however). "Member like" does not
count. Only classes of membership belong in the bylaws. While anyone (or
anything) could be a Supporter (Benefactor, starting at $10,000/a...), there
is some attraction for corporate users to be considered members. The
Institutional Membership that I have suggested would serve this purpose,
even without the right to vote. Non-member Supporters give only money;
Members, of whatever stripe, give more than money - a degree of belief in
the purposes of the organization.
janc
response 133 of 186: Mark Unseen   Nov 26 05:15 UTC 1996

That's a good point.  But we might need to clarify that members must be
individuals.  Though that is pretty clear to me as written.
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