mcmasterdonia:
Legislate. There is no need to change the bill of rights.
Again. I don't agree with your argument over it being discriminatory. It would be different if we said to be a member of the RA you require a WA nation in the region - that I agree would be discriminatory. For me, WA Nations voting on WA proposals makes sense to me.
There is a need to change the Bill of Rights if one believes that TNP citizens have a right to equal treatment. If it's a
right, it belongs in the Bill of
Rights. Aside from that, legislating this as merely part of the Legal Code would conflict with Flemingovia's legislation that is currently at vote -- whereas if it's included in the Bill of Rights it will supersede that legislation.
Your argument on discrimination doesn't make sense because we're not just talking about requiring a WA nation in the region. We're talking about requiring a WA nation in the region
or service in the NPA. Why should the NPA be exempt? They don't have a WA in the region because they're busy raiding or defending other regions, just like any other raider or defender. The only difference is that they're doing it for The North Pacific -- which is regionalist discrimination. Especially given that most of the NPA's missions are arbitrary and have nothing to do with defense of The North Pacific, prosecution of war on behalf of The North Pacific or collaboration with allies.
mcmasterdonia:
I don't consider this to be true at all. Eluvatar is not up for reelection, it could be argued he has nothing to lose. I don't think this would have affected the Council of Five election much - as going to the region and saying "you should be able to vote on WA resolutions when you don't have a WA" wouldn't have gotten much momentum as a policy. Delegate elections- I agree this will be an issue.
Frankly I agreed to the compromise for one reason and that was to get rid of this drama that I thought was unproductive to the region - and was causing good people to consider leaving, and causing rifts in peoples friendships with one another. That's why I agreed to the change, it wasn't some reason to save Eluvatar's delegacy or his legacy, he can fight for that himself. To say eluvatar is only interested in protecting his legacy, seems harsh to me.
I didn't say Eluvatar is
only interested in protecting his legacy, though I do think he'd rather be remembered for something other than being the Delegate who perpetuated regionalist discrimination in WA voting. At least I hope so.
Your reason for agreeing to the compromise was similar to my reason for agreeing to the compromise, though I'll acknowledge that I also saw the political reality that the discriminatory policy is more popular at the moment than the equality policy. The problem is that the drama didn't go away. Flemingovia resuscitated it by attempting to enshrine the Delegate's absolute power over WA voting policy into law, whereas before it was defined only by the absence of a law. Flemingovia's proposed legislation would open the door for entrenched, arbitrary regionalism mandated by the Delegate, and this legislation is necessary as a check on expanded Delegate power.
In other words, we were not the first to toss aside the compromise. Almost as soon as it was agreed to it was thrown in the trash by regionalists.
mcmasterdonia:
Some of your arguments seem conflicting to me:
There actually has been no attempt to pass such legislation, so it's premature to argue that it can't be passed.
I believe that the ultra-regionalist WA voting policy had the votes to pass the Regional Assembly as well, which was why I sought compromise,
So you think that the 'regionalist' policy would have passed the RA? Yet we are choosing to go down a path of amending the bill of rights which will require a 3/4 majority. The bill of rights has stood the test of time, I can't see this passing. If we want to change how the Delegate votes and require that all nations regardless of WA status, regardless of where the WA nation is located, I would suggest a legislative route. It would also be a good way to test the waters to see how much support this policy has.
There's nothing conflicting there. I
do think the regionalist, discriminatory policy is more popular; but I also don't think it's fair to say that a more equitable policy would fail as normal legislation when no one has yet tried to pass it as normal legislation.
As I mentioned, the problem with trying to pass this as normal legislation is Flemingovia's current proposal. In fact Flemingovia's current proposal is the entire problem. A compromise had been reached that should have laid this controversy to rest, at least for a while, but for some reason that is completely unclear to me he felt the need to reignite it in order to give the Delegate an explicit power that he already implicitly had.