> Which rule is authorizing the issuance of a card? Rule 2450, where it says that breaking a pledge is a cardable offense.
I suppose "publicly-made" might be construed to mean "in a public forum", which would prevent Donald Trump from getting a card. I can see the argument as for why G. can't be carded as of this message, but I think G. can be carded for breaking a pledge e made, provided that it was in a public forum. 天火狐 On 16 June 2017 at 02:39, Alex Smith <ais...@alumni.bham.ac.uk> wrote: > On Fri, 2017-06-16 at 02:34 -0400, 天火狐 wrote: > > I don't see how something like the following in the appropriate forum > > wouldn't successfully give a card, assuming that it was issued in the > right > > time frame: "I issue Donald Trump a Green Card for breaking his pledge to > > direct his secretary of the treasury to label China a currency > manipulator." > > Which rule is authorizing the issuance of a card? Doing so is secured > at power 1.7 (rule 2426), thus can't be done without a power 1.7+ rule > authorizing it. (Additionally, doing so is regulated (rule 2125) due to > there being specific mechanisms for it, and thus can't be done without > a rule authorizing it; the security in rule 2426 thus serves to limit > which rules could potentially make it possible, but it wouldn't be > possible even without the security restriction.) > > -- > ais523 >