On Thu, 31 Aug 2000, Rodney Joffe wrote:
Patrick Greenwell wrote:
On Thu, 31 Aug 2000, Rodney Joffe wrote:
That's a disingenuous response, Patrick.
Is it? How so?
Because failure to appear at a public hearing was never an excuse for refusing to abide by the decisions made at that hearing.
Please define "public." That ARIN may be practicing governance does not make it a government. To the best of my knowledge ARIN is a private, membership-based organization, and as such referring to any meetings they might hold as "public" would seem to me to be somewhat of a misnomer. In fact, the Organizational structure document http://www.arin.net/arin/organ.htm is pretty clear on the subject: "Membership is required for voting on issues that affect the operations of ARIN, and for nominating and electing the Board of Trustees and the Advisory Council." ARIN membership is available to those not already paying for IP allocation for a fee. So it would be fair to say that one is afforded the opportunity to buy a vote in the operation of ARIN. If I want anything approximating a voice in ARIN, I have to pay for it. What's the value proposition? What am I receiving in exchange for my money?
The board that made the recommendation/decision was elected by the membership. So it is a democracy.
Candidates for the board are selected by a nominating committee, which the membership is then afforded the opportunity to vote on. The elected board elect the officers of the organization, and makes decisions. As someone else pointed out that is more of a republic than a democracy.
If you don't like the decisions and you don't have the time to go to the meetings to voice your opinions, and you don't have the inclination to voice them on the appropriate list,
Anyone can voice an opinion on a list, it doesn't automatically equate to consideration. If that were the case, the loons would rule the day given their ability to produce sheer volume.
then vote for board members who you believe will do "the right thing(tm)".
A more accurate statement would be: "then vote for the board members selected by the nominating committee who you believe will do the right thing."
Or run for the board yourself. Maybe I'll even vote for you ;-)
No, you wouldn't. Trust me, you wouldn't like my position on what should be done to fix the current state of affairs.
Perhaps you could suggest an alternative?
Well, voting by proxy was brought up, which seems like a reasonable idea.
You already did (if you're a member) by electing the board who made the decision.
B.S. The nominating committee decides who can be elected, and there is no requirement for board members to vote any particular way. That does not describe the ability to vote by proxy.
Maybe you mean an absentee ballot system? After a while, that becomes an inefficient way to run the system.
A democracy is the most inefficient form of government. If you want the most efficient form of government a dictatorship work best. Better a little inefficiency than a lot of inequity. Consider that the certain players automatically are "in the club" http://www.arin.net/arin/organ.htm: "Internet Service Providers (ISPs) receiving IP addresses from ARIN (subscribing customers) automatically become members." Those providers are any organization big enough to receive an allocation according to ARIN policies. Are smaller provider not affected by the policies that ARIN lays down? Further, since by definition those providers are not large enough to secure portable space, aren't they in fact affected to even a *greater* degree than larger providers who automatically receive a vote?
DISCLAIMER: I am not affected by the decision, so I may be biased.
I am not going to even begin to offer comment on that given our respective positions and involvement.
I'm not sure how I would feel if I was affected by an ARIN decision.
I am not affected either currently. One does not have to suffer personally in order to formulate and offer opinions on the matter. Apologies to all if this has strayed too far off of operational content. I'll shut up now(snide remarks happily routed to the bitbucket.) :-)