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Anime Jason 
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Visionary 
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Member Since: Sat Jan 03, 2004
Posts: 2,131
Subj: Re: Well, that's... a development.
Posted: Sat Apr 17, 2010 at 12:26:31 pm EDT (Viewed 478 times)
Reply Subj: Well, that's... a development.
Posted: Sat Apr 17, 2010 at 10:12:52 am EDT (Viewed 377 times)



    Quote:
    I can't see how that ruling would stand... It doesn't seem to be based on anything more than the judge knowing the lawyer. It would open a massive floodgate of robosapiens asking to be sworn in (I'm assuming from the oath that Anna isn't declared a Natural Born Citizen, but she also didn't seem to need to pass any of the standards that foreign born humans have to meet to become a US citizen, so I'm not quite sure). The implications of it would be massive... Corporations could literally manufacture voters. The laws of democracy would need to be rewritten.


They *were* pretty sure it would be challenged. The general basis of it was that Anna is now subject to the rules of due process - so if any government organization tries to arrest her, she can demand a trial. Of course she can also lose that trial, but that's another matter. Remember, the judge said she can't grant Anna specific rights because that's beyond the court's scope. But since Anna met the minimum literal standard for citizenship, she could grant it whether it would stick or not. It's a lot like a judge marrying a couple who meets the minimum state standard.

The standards she presumably met are she's been living in the U.S. long enough, has no affiliation with any entity (the LL adopted her but she's not even a contender for membership yet), she hasn't been convicted of any crime, and she is capable of understanding the process.

(Note: That's why manufacturing voters wouldn't work - they're all affiliated with the manufacturer or whoever ordered them, and if built cheaply enough they wouldn't even understand the process)



    Quote:
    It's certainly an interesting development, however, and one my characters will need to address (considering how many of my long term plots revolve around this kind of issue.) I'm curious to see where this all will lead for Anna though, and I look forward to the next chapter.


The only place it will "lead" from my own writing perspective is she can't legally be snatched off the street and tortured by someone every month anymore by someone claiming she's just their property and they can do as they please. Presumably - it doesn't mean anyone won't try.

I do expect Hallie might be a little upset that Yuki, angry about Anna's last torturing, and that one judge may have derailed some of what she's been working on (because I believe Hallie was working on a larger scale to guarantee specific rights - something this particular judge couldn't do). But Yuki might point out that Anna couldn't wait, because she was under an imminent threat.







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