Subject: As one of those who abstained...
Author:
Posted on: 2016-04-21 19:26:00 UTC

I can't see how my decision was counted as "I'm against it". If I wanted it to be that way, I would've simply vote NO. Then why, you may ask, have I decided to abstain? The reason is simple, and I think all others who had abstained will agree:

I have no opinion on the matter.

It's equal to me not replying to the thread at all. If I didn't, would you still count me as a 'no', hS?

I've had an opportunity to observe parliamentary works from up close. And, referencing [this] post, not all voting revolved around "changing A to B", but also "should X be implemented", and in both cases there were abstain votes.

My proposition is simple, and I think that's what Phobos stated only explained more simply for uneducated folk such as myself:

We vote on X (be it a ban, a change, etc.). There are those who vote YES, there are those who vote NO, there are those who ABSTAIN. At the end of the voting - that's a separate discussion - we look at the tally. Example:

YES - 10
ABSTAINED - 17
NO - 5

In this case, the YES voters win.

Also, I may be wrong about this, but would a 60% majority really be necessary? By definition, a majority is the opinion of the bigger group of people. Even a YES-NO ratio of 10-9 would be in favour of YES voters.

Reply Return to messages