There have been parts of the US where noteworthy recall elections have been held, for example California. Are we sure we want to follow that precedent either?
On 10/7/07, Adrian aldebaer@googlemail.com wrote:
Anthony schrieb:
On 10/7/07, Adrian aldebaer@googlemail.com wrote:
With that rationale, why would we need a process where the community expresses trust with the tools in the first place?
Well, it makes sockpuppetry harder. Other than that, it really isn't needed.
Are there more people who share that opinion? I always thought RfA mattered *somehow*.
So you're basically saying: The community is good enough to be called upon to express their trust initially, but they can never express a change of heart regarding that trust? Sounds weird.
It's not a concept without precedent. Lots of US judicial positions work that way, for instance.
The status quo in US politics may not be the *gold standard* we'd want to model Wikipedia after.
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