At long last Mr. Speaker @Fregerson , I motion for a vote. Given the length of time this has been discussed, I request a shortened formal debate period, to last the duration of the weekend.
The motion for vote is acknowledged. Formal debate will last for 2 days per request, ending at (time=1647241200) (your forum time). Voting will then continue after that for 5 days.At long last Mr. Speaker @Fregerson , I motion for a vote. Given the length of time this has been discussed, I request a shortened formal debate period, to last the duration of the weekend.
@Fregerson I apologize for the sudden turnaround, but I request that this bill be pulled from the schedule until a later date. We’re keen to get this right in a way that everyone can agree and our sense of what our choices are may have been unnecessarily narrow.
This is a good change.This compromise version has eliminated the recommendation requirement.
Request for a motion & shortened formal debate noted. Vote will start for 5 days following the end of the shortened formal debate, or at (time=1647664200) (your forum time). Gives me time to go back to my computer and start a vote.I am disappointed but not surprised at the relative lack of interest in this bill given the latest development.
Mr. Speaker @Fregerson I once again call for a vote, and request a shortened formal debate period to end at midnight eastern time (a bit more than 2 hours from now) or whenever you get online and can start the vote.
This law does not affect citizens who pass the admin check. The WA requirement is only for people who appeal an admin check rejection and pass a vote of the RA. That requirement also doesn’t apply to citizens who gain citizenship this way and engage in NPA operations. It gives them an exemption. As I warned though, NPA procedure may need to be amended to allow these citizens to join NPA without an admin check, since that happens too. But I hope that you understand that this is not changing citizenship requirements for other citizens. This only affects people who go through this process.Absolutely not a fan, as a citizen already, and in the NPA of the WA requirement that it has to be on my main nation if not on an OP. WA has NOTHING to do with regional government and I only have it on my main nation primarily for delegate transitions. I see no benefit to TNP at all on what I do with my WA.
I’m glad you can live with that because that’s what the law does. The new section added for removing citizenship only applies if the person got citizenship through the new process with the RA. You and me and other people who got it through the normal three checks don’t need to worry about that.That I could live with but the way it's worded, in a court of law, someone would be removed from citizenship in any circumstance their registered nation isn't in the WA,. And every NPA app goes thru an admin check with citizenship not required. The admin check is only bypassed if the applicant is already a citizen.
The amendment should already cover that:That I could live with but the way it's worded, in a court of law, someone would be removed from citizenship in any circumstance their registered nation isn't in the WA,. And every NPA app goes thru an admin check with citizenship not required. The admin check is only bypassed if the applicant is already a citizen.
20. The Speaker will promptly remove any citizens whose registered nations in The North Pacific are not in the World Assembly, except as part of an operation with the North Pacific Army, if their citizenship was granted by the Regional Assembly after failing an evaluation by forum administration.
You think the RA would fall for that if a player clearly hasn't contributed to the region in a way that would get them government approval anyway?Plus, with the recommendations dropped, it opens the door to smart, possibly up to no good players to try to talk their way into an exemption, rather than having to work their way in.
The government officials would be an unnecessary hurdle when, as you said, the RA vote would be the core component of the process. I'm not certain what point you're trying to make.I've always thought that in practice it would be the Regional Assembly that sets the standard for who would be accepted and who would be rejected, rather than the government officials. So with the vote still retained in this version, I'm not sure it'll be any less restrictive, especially considering the added WA requirement.
The government offical recommendations and an RA vote would mean that whoever manages a successful appeal would already have a record of service in the region. Dropping the government official recommendation would mean that is no longer guaranteed. Although I expect the RA to hold a relatively high standard to be convinced that someone who hasn't yet contributed to the region will do so in the future (hence why I believe dropping the requirement in place of a WA requirement doesn't make the system much less restrictive), we can't preclude the possibility that someone could talk their way through without doing much real work. After all we have elected officials who are more talk than work many times. So I think the recommendations still serve an important function in filtering those who talk big and those who do the work.You think the RA would fall for that if a player clearly hasn't contributed to the region in a way that would get them government approval anyway?
The government officials would be an unnecessary hurdle when, as you said, the RA vote would be the core component of the process. I'm not certain what point you're trying to make.