World Assembly Resolutions
Since the rise of the World Assembly from the ashes of its predecessor, the Bureaucracy That Cannot Be Named, WA member nations have worked tirelessly to improve the standard of the world. That, or tried to force other nations to be more like them. But that's just semantics.
Below is every World Assembly resolution ever passed.
View: All | Historical | General Assembly | Security Council
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Security Council Resolution # 115
Repeal: “Liberate Land of the Liberals”
A resolution to repeal previously passed legislation.
Security Council Resolution #15 “Liberate Land of the Liberals” shall be struck out and rendered null and void.
Description: WA Security Council Resolution #15: Liberate Land of the Liberals shall be struck out and rendered null and void.
Recognizing that Liberate the Land of the Liberals sought to prevent New Earth from oppressing said region,
Observing that since the passing Security Council Resolution number fifteen, the Land of the Liberals is no longer in the control of either New Earth or the original members and has been re-founded as the property of the Alliance of Dictators,
Disappointed that the Alliance of Dictators openly taunt the Security Council by claiming to have finally defeated Liberate the Land of the Liberals,
Concluding that Security Council Resolution number fifteen no longer serves a purpose beyond being used for propaganda by the Alliance of Dictators,
Hereby Repeals "Liberate Land of the Liberals"
Passed: |
For: | 10,863 | 91.9% |
Against: | 955 | 8.1% |
General Assembly Resolution # 252
Repeal: “International Competition Law”
A resolution to repeal previously passed legislation.
General Assembly Resolution #70 “International Competition Law” (Category: Free Trade; Strength: Significant) shall be struck out and rendered null and void.
The World Assembly,
Cognizant of the intentions of GA#70 to reduce anti-competitive practices in the international market,
Admiring those intentions and lauding the efforts of the International Trade Administration,
Believing that the resolution in question has limited effectiveness, because it does not account for new or evolved anti-competitive practices,
Disappointed that the failure of foresight has led to the proliferation of many such practices worldwide,
Recognizing that the methods of regulation tasked to the International Trade Administration are excessively cumbersome,
Noting that the resolution seeks an international solution to the problems many national regulatory agencies face,
Understanding, however, that easing the burdens national regulatory agencies face in the pursuit of good business practices, rather than assuming those burdens, would be a preferable solution to those problems,
Believing that the World Assembly can work to ease those burdens and stop anti-competitive practices more easily without GA#70,
Hereby repeals GA#70.
Passed: |
For: | 10,951 | 87.0% |
Against: | 1,634 | 13.0% |
Security Council Resolution # 116
Repeal: “Condemn True North”
A resolution to repeal previously passed legislation.
Security Council Resolution #105 “Condemn True North” shall be struck out and rendered null and void.
The Security Council:
RECOGNIZING that the regional population within the Condemned region has dropped from over 5,000 nations in the weeks prior to the passage of SC#105 to a more reasonable amount numbering in the hundreds of nations,
CONFIDENT that True North no longer carries out willful nation-gathering tactics and in so doing no longer poses a threat to regional recruitment or the traveling speeds of the world,
BELIEVING that the Condemnation has succeeded as the region has drastically reduced the use of "puppet flooding" to artificially inflate the regional population,
REMAINING vehemently opposed to regions who use the tactic of "puppet flooding," as in the case that led to the passage of SC#105,
COGNIZANT that SC#105 is now superfluous and no longer applicable, due to the aforementioned reasons,
HEREBY REPEALS SC#105, "Condemn True North."
Co-Authored by Vinage and Mousebumples
Passed: |
For: | 9,678 | 82.7% |
Against: | 2,022 | 17.3% |
Security Council Resolution # 117
Repeal: “Liberate Region of reunited muslim states”
A resolution to repeal previously passed legislation.
Security Council Resolution #88 “Liberate Region of reunited muslim states” shall be struck out and rendered null and void.
The Security Council,
Recognizing the horrors endured by the native community under the destructive occupation conducted by The Black Riders at the time of Security Council resolution # 88's composition;
Noting since the passing of Security Council resolution # 88, Region of Reunited Muslim States, otherwise known as RORMS, has been refounded;
Saddened in the lack of a regional community within RORMS to which the liberation resolution would hold responsibility to;
Understanding that the absence of a regional community is not due entirely to the destructive events of The Black Riders invasion but more accredited to times corroding affects on the region;
Believing that the fate of RORMS is no longer any business of the Security Council, and Security Council resolution # 88 holds no purpose;
Hereby Repeals: Liberate Region of Reunited Muslim States
Passed: |
For: | 8,733 | 79.9% |
Against: | 2,193 | 20.1% |
General Assembly Resolution # 253
Repeal: “Freedom in Medical Research”
A resolution to repeal previously passed legislation.
General Assembly Resolution #171 “Freedom in Medical Research” (Category: Free Trade; Strength: Significant) shall be struck out and rendered null and void.
The General Assembly,
Realizing that Resolution 171, Freedom in Medical Research, says the following,
"Doctors, and other medical professionals that utilize controversial forms of treatment shall not be penalized by either the individual, post-procedure, or the government, unless fully informed consent was not acquired,"
Regretting that this provision prevents patients from suing physicians who have harmed them while providing "controversial forms of treatment" and that it further prevents governments from prosecuting or removing the medical licenses of physicians who act negligently while providing "controversial forms of treatment," a phrase that the resolution never defines,
Believing that the patient, at least in some cases (which should be determined by law), is entitled to compensation for any loss or injury that he suffers at the hands of a physician, even if that patient did provide informed consent to the procedure that harmed him,
Opining that consent to a controversial procedure is not necessarily consent to every potential loss or injury that might result therefrom,
Suggesting that physicians who perform "controversial forms of treatment" and want to avoid lawsuits require the persons whom they are treating to sign contracts waiving the right to sue (see Resolution 205, Freedom to Contract) instead of relying on this Assembly to protect them from their own negligence or incompetence when they harm their patients,
Concerned that the provision quoted above unduly might restrict the authority of governments to regulate or to ban unproven medical procedures that are performed by charlatans and that are likely to cause severe harm or significant financial loss to patients and their families,
Noting that Resolution 171, Freedom in Medical Research, also says the following,
"Medicinal drugs, and other such substances shall visibly print the side-effects, ingredients, and the company in which the substance was produced on the vessel in which it's sold in,"
Understanding that it is often impossible to fit an entire list of the ingredients and potential side effects of a drug on the label of the vessel and that it is more reasonable for the drug and its container to be accompanied by a separate pamphlet or booklet that contains a full list of ingredients and potential side effects in a font size that is large enough to read,
Worried, therefore, that the requirement that all side effects and ingredients be printed on the vessel is unreasonable,
Holding the position that Resolution 171, Freedom in Medical Research, is flawed for the aforementioned reasons,
Clarifying that the passage of this repeal does not prevent member states from enacting and enforcing their own laws to provide legal protection or immunity to physicians who offer and provide controversial or experimental forms of medical treatment,
Repeals Resolution 171, Freedom in Medical Research, thus rendering it null and void.
Passed: |
For: | 8,777 | 76.3% |
Against: | 2,728 | 23.7% |