Subject: Here are my thoughts, for what they're worth.
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Posted on: 2016-04-21 18:04:00 UTC

I support the idea of three categories: In favor, against, and abstaining. A sixty percent majority of all votes--counting the abstaining--to pass the ban sounds good to me. Presumably, a person abstains for their own reasons, and their opinion ought to be counted when it comes to passing the measure.

Furthermore, I think a response thread ought to be started in which each person who feels they have been wronged or have seen wrongdoing in a response to one of their own posts can report it, linking to the offending post(s). That way, no one person feels they have to shoulder the burden of finding every instance of abuse and reporting it. Then, if it's necessary, someone can go through and create a master list of accusations so it's easier to keep track of.

The political side of me comes out in this: I think there ought to be a small committee, perhaps three to five, consisting of people who both know the Constitution and are relatively unbiased in this matter, to go through the master list and see if each accusation holds water. This should be done as speedily as possible. They can then present the new list as evidence: If someone has a problem with the new charges, I'm not entirely sure what should be done. Presumably a debate would ensue, but it would likely result in a stalemate; this is the most tentative of my opinions. Feel free to completely disregard it--I know it would be a fair bit of work. Each committee would likely be different for each case for banning, but they don't happen much.

I realize that my suggested process is probably too laborious, but at the same time, banning is a big deal, and ought to be taken seriously. A process ought to be in place to make sure it's as fair as possible, and, hopefully, we won't have to use it much.

Those are my thoughts, take them or leave them.

-Alleb

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