On Thu, 21 Feb 2019, Kerim Aydin wrote:
On Thu, Feb 21, 2019 at 12:57 AM Gaelan Steele <g...@canishe.com> wrote:
The proposed rule is a prohibition on a certain type of change.
Because 106 says “except as prohibited by other rules”, it defers to
this rule.
Deference clauses only work between rules of the same power. Power is
the first test applied (R1030).
I think the "Except as prohibited by other rules" is a condition, and
_possibly_ also a deference (it depends on exactly what deference means).
But because it's a condition rather than just something like "This Rule
defers to blah blah blah", it also naturally prevents a conflict from
arising, and therefore the fact that it's a deference shouldn't matter.
Greetings,
Ørjan.