Subject: The inherrent problem of law-making.
Author:
Posted on: 2017-04-25 16:07:00 UTC

A thing we may want to keep in mind in the course of this discussion is that no rule can ever perfectly account for every hypothetical scenario. There's always going to be the potential for cases that fall outside the norm. So, we should try to cover what's most likely to occur, and not worry too much about the outside chances. If/when they come up, we should maintain the flexibility to interpret the rules as needed. That way we don't get ridiculously specific things like prohibiting unmarried women from parachuting on Sunday. (This is apparently a real law in Florida.)

So, if the rule were a one-year statute of limitations, and we clearly observed someone deliberately waiting one year to harass someone, that would, IMO, give the rules against harassment precedence over the statute of limitations. It would reveal a level of cold, calculating malice that we would certainly not wish to tolerate.

Also, I think most things that would warrant an exception to the statute would be permaban-worthy in the first place. Threats, abuse, etc.

So, that's my case.

~Neshomeh

(Yay, shiny!)

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