|
|
|
|
|
by ncallaway
880 days ago
|
|
> apart from (in theory) having to abide by the WSFS constitution Wasn't the concern that they _didn't_ abide by the WSFS constitution? > The Chengdu concom appeared to be following the rules right up until they didn't any more and went "rules? what rules?" Right, but WSFS then seemed to loudly proclaim that they have _no ability_ to enforce that each Worldcon obeys the rules? Which, if false, is a lie to avoid accountability, and if true demonstrates a deep level of organization ineptness. It seems like the WSFS has fallen down either on the enforcement side, or on the contractual relationship with the Worldcoms if enforcement isn't possible. |
|
It's true, but your mistake is in assuming an actual organization exists.
WSFS is just a club, the membership of which consists of the paying members of the current worldcon. The WSFS constitution is a set of rules for the WSFS business meeting which handles stuff like the bidding process for the next-but-one worldcon, and running running the Hugo awards. But there's no continuity of WSFS membership or governance from one worldcon to another except insofar as some people may be members of two or more consecutive worldcons.
It worked for 80 consecutive worldcons, then broke when it ran up against folks who didn't abide by the norms of behaviour that the rules presuppose.