OK, I see the discussion has drifted from the issue being constitutional... to the appropriate action taken being within accepted constituional parameters. No fair changing horses mid-stream. To this last shift of opinion, I say that the process of impeachment will do nothing but glorify the non-particpating Leader and lengthen the time it takes to bring relief to the constituents that have been without assistance long enough to initiate this process.

So now Donsig, who wants to streamline the ruleset, asks us to make rules on how to ensure instructions are posted to carry us through times of neglect (how many rules will that take?) plus more rules to govern MIA impeachments. I'm sure there would be more rules to make these rules accpetable too.
Ah, good. Done with the first paragraph...I'm going to post this and give it a rest until Bill_in_PDX gives his review. Hopefully he's still pissed off about PDX being sacked.
Here is article G again:
quote:
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All offices will be filled via election with terms lasting one calendar month.
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It says "All 'offices' will be filled". This is not stating that a person elected to an office will be in a term lasting 1 month, it states the CYClical duration of the office's term is one month, and then another election is held. If a person gets elected to an office and then resigns the next day, the term of the office still lasts till the end of the month, and we need a new person to fill the office because of that.
Now we go to Article J of the Constitution. Please don't confuse this with Section J of the COS.
Article J. Elected officials must plan and act according to the will of the people.
MIA Leaders don't plan or act according to the will of the people. Even if a Govenor was to put a queue in place for the cities in his Province that was 8 deep, if the citizens in one or two of those cities request a change in the queues because of a new development in the game, how is the MIA going to respond? How will he plan for the citizens concerns from that point on? He won't, you know it and I know it. We could always let Donsig determine what is best for those ciutizens, but he is not accountable for his actions. He's just a citizen living in a different Province. So maybe we could let Donsig make another rule about which citizen would come closest to being accountable to these people, for making the major decisions. Then we could have more rules on how THAT person should be responsible for making sure everything went the way Donsig wanted it. My point being that these MIA's can't possibly abide by Article J of the Constitution on a consistant basis.
And finally, (yes, I'm running out of steam) to put a personal touch on this, I would say that in most discussions had by Patriots about Constitutions and devotion to Country, the concept of the sacrificing of the one for the good of the whole is passed around quite a bit. Even if that is in reference to self-sacrificing (which we don't see much of from MIA's). I believe this principle could be applied here as surely, the loss of one's position (with the obligatory bullet-biting), is the least one could do for the benefit of a whole Province or even a Nation. We can't keep protecting the rights of people who flagrantly ignore the rights of the citizens they are supposed to aid.
There, I'm done.