"I'm familiar with it."
Dame Allania reaches down the top of her medieval-style dress, pulls out a cell phone, taps on the screen a few times, and then slides it over.
"This contains social media postings from a number of nations, in which people discuss their bedroom activities. Note these are from the internet, so according to both yourself and the ambassador from Kenmoria, as you both agreed, these discussions of bedroom activities are public sphere. My challenge stands."
OOC: The problem with 'reasonable nation theory' as a reply is the very fact that it is not uncommon for modern nations to have discussiong of certain activities that should be considered private be discussed on social media. The question of "what is public sphere and what is not" is something a reasonably-modern nation would reasonably struggle with.
Kenmoria wrote:“To add to McCooley’s point, if authors were required to define every relevant term to the proposal, legislation would quickly become a mass of recursive definitions, and likely many pages long. I do not believe that anyone here is paid enough for that. Fortunately, GA #002 mandates that member nations carry out their obligations in good-faith, resulting in a definition which counts the bedroom as being a public area quite evidently being a contradiction of other legislation.”
"I'm not asking them to. I'm asking for the most problematic to be defined.
"Also, need I remind you of the Assembly rules on proposals? That they must be self-contained and not reliant upon any other proposals or resolutions? In your attempt to defend this one, you are arguing it is dependent upon other proposals and thus, by Assembly rules, illegal. And, also, that definition of public sphere is not a reasonable expectation, given how often discussion of bedroom activities can happen in public."