Does a small tribe spend its time on this stuff? Of course not. They go to the tribal elder and a decision is made efficiently.
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and you find yourself with the trade-off I mentioned. the uncertainty of his decision will discourage economic activity.
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Replying to @cultofunreason @jkomrade
Oh it's pretty easy to ask him what he thinks about what would be allowed.
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so what does he do? write it down? who collects these precedents? who ensures businesses are aware of them? lawyers emerge
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Replying to @cultofunreason @jkomrade
Hang on, we agree that the time spent on complete meaninglessness is a big problem. You say that the way to reduce that is clearer laws.
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I say the way to reduce that is clearer authority, less divided power. I'm not seeing how clearer laws would help time spent on meaningless
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aspects since all of the arguing over meaningless stuff comes directly from the law, which tends to be rather clear about the necessity of
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arguing about the meaningless stuff.
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divided power sucks, but isnt relevant here. if your authority decides cases inconsistently, economic activity will be discouraged.
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Replying to @cultofunreason @jkomrade
I can also tell you that from what I've seen, cases aren't dragged into millions of dollars of legal fees due to statutory uncertainty.
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This is actually totally contrary to my observations. The statutes are too certain about too many things, if anything.
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