Indeed I did. Well, that's good. -Aris
On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 5:56 PM VJ Rada <vijar...@gmail.com> wrote: > I transfer my version of that pledge back to Aris. > > I think you've forgotten that breaking the terms of pledges is legal, > only having them called in is illegal. > > On Wed, Nov 8, 2017 at 12:51 PM, Aris Merchant > <thoughtsoflifeandligh...@gmail.com> wrote: > > For each player X except myself (sorry V.J.): > > > > { > > I create a pledge with the text "I shall not transfer pledges, unless > > my name is Aris." > > I transfer that pledge to X. > > } > > > > -Aris > > > > > > > > On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 5:43 PM, VJ Rada <vijar...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Also "An asset generally CAN be destroyed by its owner by > >> announcement, subject to modification by its backing document.". > >> > >> Therefore we can destroy shinies and pledges by announcement > >> > >> "An asset generally CAN be transferred (syn. paid, given) by > >> announcement by its owner to another entity, subject to modification > >> by its backing document. A fixed asset is one defined as such by its > >> backing document, and CANNOT be transferred; any other asset is > >> liquid." > >> > >> Therefore pledges can be transferred, only a rule defines them as a > >> backing document. > >> > >> On Wed, Nov 8, 2017 at 12:39 PM, VJ Rada <vijar...@gmail.com> wrote: > >>> From rule 2166, "Assets" > >>> > >>> "An asset is an entity defined as such by a (a) rule, (b) authorized > >>> regulation, (c) group of rules and/or authorized regulations (but if > >>> such regulations modify a preexisting asset class defined by a rule or > >>> another title of regulations, they must be authorized specifically to > >>> do so by their parent rule), or (d) contract (hereafter its backing > >>> document)" > >>> > >>> It is clear that a backing document is only a contract from the way > >>> the rule is written. This was clearly just added in a non-careful way, > >>> but textually, a contract is a backing document and nothing else is. > >>> Therefore, there's no recordkeepor because "The recordkeepor of a > >>> class of assets is the entity (if any) defined as such by, and bound > >>> by, its backing document.". A rule of lower power defines the > >>> Treasuror as the recordkeepor for shinies, but that must defer to this > >>> higher power rule. > >>> -- > >>> From V.J. Rada > >> > >> > >> > >> -- > >> From V.J. Rada > > > > -- > From V.J. Rada >