We are working on a brand new version of the game! If you want to stay informed, read our blog and register for our mailing list.
Bill: Teacher's right to discipline children is not good
Details
Submitted by[?]: Bund der Demokraten und Liberalen
Status[?]: defeated
Votes: This is an ordinary bill. It requires more yes votes than no votes. This bill will not pass any sooner than the deadline.
Voting deadline: December 4141
Description[?]:
Teacher`s Teachers are forbidden from striking children and may only use non-contact discipline (detention, expulsion etc). My parties solution No forms of direct discipline are allowed. Reason: Children have right as other inhabitans of this land |
Proposals
Article 1
Proposal[?] to change The teacher's right to discipline children.
Old value:: Teachers are forbidden from striking children and may only use non-contact discipline (detention, expulsion etc).
Current: Teachers are forbidden from striking children and may only use non-contact discipline (detention, expulsion etc).
Proposed: No forms of direct discipline are allowed.
Debate
These messages have been posted to debate on this bill:
Date | 13:35:47, December 26, 2016 CET | From | Bund der Demokraten und Liberalen | To | Debating the Teacher's right to discipline children is not good |
Message | The children have also rights and are equivalent |
subscribe to this discussion - unsubscribe
Voting
Vote | Seats | ||||
yes | Total Seats: 75 | ||||
no |
Total Seats: 284 | ||||
abstain | Total Seats: 141 |
Random fact: Players have a responsibility to differentiate between OOC (out-of-character) and IC (in-character) behaviour, and to make clear when they are communicating in OOC or IC terms. Since Particracy is a role-playing game, IC excesses are generally fine, but OOC attacks are not. However, players must not presume this convention permits them to harass a player with IC remarks that have a clear OOC context. |
Random quote: "I bet their mothers don't love them. Many Trigunian women are so cold. I mean it's a racist hellhole in parts." - Tirza Sommer, former Dorvish politician |