Post by Fewms on Jan 26, 2009 0:23:12 GMT
100 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
Magistrates may apply punishments to players if they break the rules, at the magistrates' discretion abiding by any current rules.
101 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
Only citizens are eligible voters.
102 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
In a conflict between a mutable and an immutable rule, the immutable rule takes precedence and the mutable rule shall be entirely void. In a conflict between citizen rules and general rules, the citizen rules will always override the general rules, although citizen rules only apply to citizens.
103 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
All proposed rule changes shall be discussed by the magistrates before they are voted on. If they are adopted, they shall guide play in the form in which they were voted on.
104 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
Each citizen has exactly one vote.
105 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
There must be a council of a fixed number of magistrates appointed by the citizens. Of these magistrates, at least one must be a player killer and one must be a non-player killer.
106 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
No rule-change may take effect earlier than the moment of the completion of the vote that adopted it, even if its wording explicitly states otherwise. No rule-change may have retroactive application.
107 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
Each proposed rule-change shall be given a number for reference. The numbers shall begin with 300 for general rules, and 2000 for citizen rules. Each rule-change proposed in the proper way shall receive the next successive integer, whether or not the proposal is adopted. When a rule is transmuted it will receive the next available rule number in the rule block, the rule number must be unique.
108 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
All players must abide by the rules and any transgression of the rules will be dealt with by the magistrates with punishments within the rules.
109 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
Only magistrates may add and amend rules.
110 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
A rule-change is any of the following:
(1) the enactment, repeal, or amendment of a citizen rule;
(2) the enactment, repeal, or amendment of a general rule;
or
(3) the transmutation of a general rule into a citizen rule or vice versa.
111 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
Citizen rules only apply to citizens, general rules apply to everyone.
112 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
All rule-changes proposed in the proper way shall be voted on. They will be adopted if and only if they receive the required number of votes.
113 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
All rules will have at least 1 week's debate and time for amendments before being put to the vote by the magistrates. After the magistrates have voted in favour of a rule it must also be ratified by the citizens.
Magistrates may apply punishments to players if they break the rules, at the magistrates' discretion abiding by any current rules.
101 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
Only citizens are eligible voters.
102 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
In a conflict between a mutable and an immutable rule, the immutable rule takes precedence and the mutable rule shall be entirely void. In a conflict between citizen rules and general rules, the citizen rules will always override the general rules, although citizen rules only apply to citizens.
103 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
All proposed rule changes shall be discussed by the magistrates before they are voted on. If they are adopted, they shall guide play in the form in which they were voted on.
104 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
Each citizen has exactly one vote.
105 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
There must be a council of a fixed number of magistrates appointed by the citizens. Of these magistrates, at least one must be a player killer and one must be a non-player killer.
106 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
No rule-change may take effect earlier than the moment of the completion of the vote that adopted it, even if its wording explicitly states otherwise. No rule-change may have retroactive application.
107 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
Each proposed rule-change shall be given a number for reference. The numbers shall begin with 300 for general rules, and 2000 for citizen rules. Each rule-change proposed in the proper way shall receive the next successive integer, whether or not the proposal is adopted. When a rule is transmuted it will receive the next available rule number in the rule block, the rule number must be unique.
108 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
All players must abide by the rules and any transgression of the rules will be dealt with by the magistrates with punishments within the rules.
109 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
Only magistrates may add and amend rules.
110 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
A rule-change is any of the following:
(1) the enactment, repeal, or amendment of a citizen rule;
(2) the enactment, repeal, or amendment of a general rule;
or
(3) the transmutation of a general rule into a citizen rule or vice versa.
111 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
Citizen rules only apply to citizens, general rules apply to everyone.
112 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
All rule-changes proposed in the proper way shall be voted on. They will be adopted if and only if they receive the required number of votes.
113 by Djelibeybi administrator (Mon Jul 2 06:32:08 2001):
All rules will have at least 1 week's debate and time for amendments before being put to the vote by the magistrates. After the magistrates have voted in favour of a rule it must also be ratified by the citizens.