Read line 1 of the pledge. If part of the pledge is saying I CAN revoke it (including a method), I can do so as part of keeping the pledge, I assume.
On Fri, 15 Sep 2017, Cuddle Beam wrote: > There's a proposal up for non-forever pledges. > > On Fri, Sep 15, 2017 at 3:46 AM, Quazie <quazieno...@gmail.com> wrote: > You can't revoke pledges > On Thu, Sep 14, 2017 at 18:44 Kerim Aydin <ke...@u.washington.edu> > wrote: > > > I intend to revoke the below pledge with 4 days notice. It was made > while > I was a non-player and CFJs were free for me. > > (if I do this, the proposal will now make me party to an agreement > without consent, > but now that it's pointed out that I can be forced to pay for others' > cfjs, I don't > want to leave it around long enough to revoke it after the proposal > passes) > > On Thu, 14 Sep 2017, Owen Jacobson wrote: > > Create a pledge owned by G., whose terms are > > > > { > > This pledge is known as The Prosecutor's Office > > > > 1. I CAN revoke or alter this pledge by giving 4 Days > Notice. > > > > 2. If a CFJ is submitted to The Prosecutor's Office > (private or > > public to me, but not in Discussion), I shall follow the > > following formal process to resolve the matter of > > controversy: > > > > a. I shall enter it into the bottom of the Judicial > Queue. > > > > b. At most once per day, and and most 5 times per week, > I'll > > initiate an Agoran Call for Judgement on the CFJ on > the > > top of the Judicial Queue (also barring judges as > > requested by the submitter). > > > > c. By request, the submitter may remain anonymous. > > > > d. Absolutely free of charge, as able, I'll research and > > add gratuitous arguments in favor of the submitter's > > position, and I'll not argue against the submitter's > > position except in private with the submitter. > > > > -G. > > } > > > > >