Todd Schmidgall wrote:
Salute!
Marechal Knox quoted from the proposed rules:
The duties of the Cabinet are broad, and include the various administrative aspects of running the club that lie outside the daily administration of the individual armies. Cabinet duties are generally focused on the matters arising in our club that have a larger impact on the membership as a whole.
Yes indeed!
Since much has been made of semantics, I feel that the cabinet should only focus on administrative aspects outside the daily function of the armies. Cabinet duties focus on matters that have impact to the club as a whole. The inclusion of terms like"broad" or "generally" are not sufficiently specific. If the cabinet is giving itself the authority to intervene in the running of the armies, then that is not something I can support, regardless of what the duties "generally" consist of. I don't care what their focus is. I am more interested on where the limits of cabinet authority lie.
Since much effort has been spent on the duties of commanders, and very specific rules around activity, why be vague in this regard? Instead, keep it simple, delete the words broad and generally from this section.
Quote:
David Guegan asked if the Cabinet has a regulatory or sanctioning function?
Yes it does.
And then he asks how there can be two branches of the club, but one over the other:
The armies run themselves within the general parameters established by the rules of the club - there are rules at this present time listed on the front web page of the club, that very clearly dictate aspects of the army functions - indeed the awarding of points for rank, how game points are awarded, responsibilities of the army commanders, etc.
There is nothing new here.
Separate branches based on function, not on total autonomy from oversight of the one by the other.
We are talking about serious issues that effect the membership on the whole - and if an individual army commander were to be riding roughshod over the rights of the membership, that would be the time and place for the cabinet to intervene - not over how the daily functions occur - no one is saying that.
Regards,
So, your concern is over an army commander's behavior? OK, so why would that make me want to vote for a set of rules that need more work before they are complete? I've already stated that matters like expulsion and grievances should be presented to the cabinet. No disagreement on that.
But, what if the cabinet decided to replace the French or Allied commander? Under what conditions can this be done? What are the safeguards to prevent abuse? Much has been made of the fear of an overbearing army commander; shouldn't the same consideration be given to a cabinet that assigns itself too much control over the membership? I don't anticipate that is something that is intended, and I trust the current cabinet would not. But when codifying a set of rules, one must be wary of future unintended consequences. The proper mechanism is that the officers in that army elect a new commander through the principles of democracy. Everyone in that army has a say, just as they should so there is no reason for the cabinet to interfere.
The debate about the role of the cabinet has been going on for a long time. I doubt it will end soon.