Gracius Maximus:
Crushing Our Enemies:
No.
You failing to understand does not automatically equate to the ruling being unclear. It simply means
you did not understand.
You took part of the ruling out of context and asked questions that were painfully obvious if only you had addressed the ruling as a whole. The heading is part of the ruling. Your choice to ignore it and harp on "deputies of deputies" and other extraneous issues simply illustrated your lack of comprehension in my opinion, not an error in the ruling.
From those I have spoken with about it, it was very clear. It was also very clear that you were either deliberately or ignorantly asking questions that were clearly addressed in the ruling. I would hope you spoke out of ignorance instead of antagonism, but I am unsure.
Okay, if there's one thing I learned from the crap that I got over the few months I spent on the Court, is that if you've got a lot of people saying that they can't figure out what your ruling is saying and that it's unclear, then
it probably is. Or, at least, for the intents of purposes of having an actually useful ruling bank, it's pretty much useless. If the only people who can understand a ruling are those who made it, you've got a -serious- problem on your hands.
However, that's a little bit of a sidetrack. I don't think making a crappy ruling and being obstructive about answering questions on it is in itself a reason for recall, especially as I can understand why it happens, having done it myself.
Saying that, I think a lot would be gained here from the Court trying for a moment to take a step back, out of the defensive. I know it's bloody hard, I pretty much couldn't do it, but for the sake of the region -try-. Mistakes get made and they have to be acknowledged, and ignoring questions on rulings purely because you think that the person asking them has to be -really- stupid to want to ask them (hint, they're probably not) never ends somewhere good.