- Proposition to Revert the Economy to Communism.
- Following the less than successful introduction of bits to the system, many people have expressed their negative opinion of the attempt.
- Therefore, this proposition endeavours to return the economy to a position in time before the introduction as well as establish the economic rights, responsibilities, and relationship between citizens.
- Rules to be read with common sense, not by the strict letter
- 1. Rights and Responsibilities of Citizens
- 1.1 - All Citizens work for the betterment of town.
- 1.1.1 - If there is no stable work to be had, a Citizen is expected to meet any minor tasks that is asked of them.
- 1.1.2 - Such tasks should take little effort and/or time, go'fering, delivering messages or small items, etc.
- 1.1.3 - Dereliction of work may result in punitive measures, not to exceed loss of citizenship.
- 1.2 - All Citizens will have their base Needs met.
- 1.2.1 - The Needs of a Citizen includes, but is not limited to: Food, Water, Shelter, and Security
- 1.2.2 - The magnitude of the Need met is dependant on resources available and their priorities.
- 2. Rights and Responsibilities of Labourers, including Overseers and Supervisors.
- 2.1 - A Labourer may chose his own place of work.
- 2.2 - A Labourer is to follow reasonable commands from his superior during his working hours.
- 2.2.1 - The labourer may refuse a command he feels is unreasonable
- 2.2.1.1 - Such a refusal will be considered by a judge and/or trial
- 3.2.3 - A Trial will be based of rules of logical argumentation, but unavoidable rhetoric will be permitted.
- 3.2.3.1 - What, if any, rhetoric are deemed unavoidable will be determined by the formal judge.
- 2.2.2 - Failure to follow lawful commands may result in termination of employment and/or punitive measures.
- 2.2.3 - A Labourer is expected to spend no more than 10 hours on-site.
- 2.2.4 - Including travel-time, a Labourer is expected to allocate no more than 12 hours per day on work.
- 3. Rights and Responsibilities of Craftsmen, including servicemen plying a craft.
- 3.1 - All Craftsmen are expected to meet -reasonable- requests of their craft.
- 3.2 - What orders are defined as reasonable will be left to the craftsman in question to determine
- 3.2.1 - Refusing orders may bring the reasoning and workload of the craftsman on trial.
- 3.2.2 - Trial will be conducted before a group of informal judges consisting of both craftsmen and consumers, as well as a formal judge to oversee the proceedings.
- 3.2.3 - A Trial will be based of rules of logical argumentation, but unavoidable rhetoric will be permitted.
- 3.2.3.1 - What, if any, rhetoric are deemed unavoidable will be determined by the formal judge.
- 3.3 - Craftsmen may request compensation to meet an unreasonable request.
- 3.3.1 - Compensation must be agreed upon prior to the deal.
- 3.3.2 - Quantifiable compensation will be taxed.
- 3.4 - Craftsmen have access to the town's resources, pertaining to their craft.
- 3.4.1 - All resource use must be logged. [Log: //derpy.me/cusp1 ;; Tutorial: //pastebin.com/nWWqDV7j]
- 4. Rights and Responsibilities of Specific Citizens
- 4.1 - Every work site has a Supervisor, the supervisor is responsible that the information in the town's employment ledger is up-to-date. [Work Sites: //derpy.me/506gl ;; Tutorial //pastebin.com/GeRYQEqd]