- Joined
- Apr 18, 2025
- Messages
- 37
IN THE CHANCERY OF THE KINGDOM OF ALEXANDRIA
CLOSING STATEMENT
INTRODUCTION
Throughout these proceedings, the Crown has demonstrated that the playtime requirement constitutes a constitutional, reasonable, and justified limitation on the constitutional right to run for office. The evidence establishes three key propositions:
1. UNIQUELY SERVED A LEGITIMATE PURPOSE
Minister Thritystone testified that the playtime requirement clearly measures specific elements of competency that neither the waiting period nor the citizenship exam addresses. As he stated, playtime is a condition for participation in the administrative process. The Crown has repeatedly argued that without the playtime requirement, unqualified and uninformed individuals could become members of Parliament and jeopardize its efficacy and integrity. As a Minister and Member of Parliament, the witness's testimony clearly evidences a legitimate connection between playtime and legislative competency.
2. USE OF VERIFIABLE DATA
The Witness confirmed that the Ministry used data obtained through the /about command, which is accessible to all citizens. Additionally, he stated that violations of the playtime requirement were well documented with timestamped screenshots, creating an independently verifiable record.
3. NO PERSONAL OR DISCRETIONARY JUDGEMENT
Minister Thritystone confirmed unequivocally that no personal or discretionary judgment was exercised, and all decisions were made with strict adherence to the law.
4. UNIFORM APPLICATION ACROSS ALL CANDIDATES
The witness confirmed the playtime requirement was enforced across all candidates, without exception.
THE CITIZENSHIP EXAM AND JUDICIARY PRECEDENT
Ministry Thritystone’s testimony demonstrates that the playtime requirement clearly serves a distinct purpose that neither the citizenship exam nor the waiting period fulfills. The Minister, when asked what specific competency the playtime requirement measures that other requirements do not, explained that, unlike other qualification mechanisms, the playtime requirement measures candidates' knowledge of the effects of implemented policy.
The Crown reiterates that the playtime requirement uniquely serves a legitimate purpose. It argues, however, that whether or not the citizenship exam could theoretically serve a similar purpose to the playtime requirement is not at issue in this case. According to previous judicial precedent,
"Parliament may choose from a range of reasonable solutions for a given problem, even when one solution may obviously impact rights and liberties more than another." See ColonelKai v. Crown, Case 8 (Ch. 2025). In this case, the Chancery clearly stated that Parliament does not need to find some objective "minimum rights infringed." It was stated that "it is unreasonable to believe that Parliament must always find some objective 'minimum rights infringed' point along the spectrum of possible solutions to a given issue."
ON THE "TWO CLASSES OF CITIZENS" ARGUMENT
Plaintiff's claim that this law creates two classes of citizenship, wherein one has separate rights from the other, is patently false. Every citizen has equal protection under the law, under which they are free to exercise their right to run for office as they please, so long as they meet this reasonable standard imposed by Parliament. "Two classes of citizens" would imply some citizens have the right to run for office, while others do not, based on some immutable individual characteristic. The same reasonable standard has been imposed on all candidates across the board, regardless of any party affiliation or personal characteristics. The playtime requirement is a neutral, objective qualification that any citizen can satisfy.
SUMMARY:
Soggeh T. Oast
Minister of Justice
Kingdom of Alexandria
CLOSING STATEMENT
INTRODUCTION
Throughout these proceedings, the Crown has demonstrated that the playtime requirement constitutes a constitutional, reasonable, and justified limitation on the constitutional right to run for office. The evidence establishes three key propositions:
- The requirement serves a legitimate purpose;
- It is based on objective, independently verifiable criteria;
- It was uniformly enforced across all candidates, without exception
1. UNIQUELY SERVED A LEGITIMATE PURPOSE
Minister Thritystone testified that the playtime requirement clearly measures specific elements of competency that neither the waiting period nor the citizenship exam addresses. As he stated, playtime is a condition for participation in the administrative process. The Crown has repeatedly argued that without the playtime requirement, unqualified and uninformed individuals could become members of Parliament and jeopardize its efficacy and integrity. As a Minister and Member of Parliament, the witness's testimony clearly evidences a legitimate connection between playtime and legislative competency.
2. USE OF VERIFIABLE DATA
The Witness confirmed that the Ministry used data obtained through the /about command, which is accessible to all citizens. Additionally, he stated that violations of the playtime requirement were well documented with timestamped screenshots, creating an independently verifiable record.
3. NO PERSONAL OR DISCRETIONARY JUDGEMENT
Minister Thritystone confirmed unequivocally that no personal or discretionary judgment was exercised, and all decisions were made with strict adherence to the law.
4. UNIFORM APPLICATION ACROSS ALL CANDIDATES
The witness confirmed the playtime requirement was enforced across all candidates, without exception.
THE CITIZENSHIP EXAM AND JUDICIARY PRECEDENT
Ministry Thritystone’s testimony demonstrates that the playtime requirement clearly serves a distinct purpose that neither the citizenship exam nor the waiting period fulfills. The Minister, when asked what specific competency the playtime requirement measures that other requirements do not, explained that, unlike other qualification mechanisms, the playtime requirement measures candidates' knowledge of the effects of implemented policy.
The Crown reiterates that the playtime requirement uniquely serves a legitimate purpose. It argues, however, that whether or not the citizenship exam could theoretically serve a similar purpose to the playtime requirement is not at issue in this case. According to previous judicial precedent,
"Parliament may choose from a range of reasonable solutions for a given problem, even when one solution may obviously impact rights and liberties more than another." See ColonelKai v. Crown, Case 8 (Ch. 2025). In this case, the Chancery clearly stated that Parliament does not need to find some objective "minimum rights infringed." It was stated that "it is unreasonable to believe that Parliament must always find some objective 'minimum rights infringed' point along the spectrum of possible solutions to a given issue."
ON THE "TWO CLASSES OF CITIZENS" ARGUMENT
Plaintiff's claim that this law creates two classes of citizenship, wherein one has separate rights from the other, is patently false. Every citizen has equal protection under the law, under which they are free to exercise their right to run for office as they please, so long as they meet this reasonable standard imposed by Parliament. "Two classes of citizens" would imply some citizens have the right to run for office, while others do not, based on some immutable individual characteristic. The same reasonable standard has been imposed on all candidates across the board, regardless of any party affiliation or personal characteristics. The playtime requirement is a neutral, objective qualification that any citizen can satisfy.
SUMMARY:
- Witness testimony has established that the playtime requirement is a reasonable, objective, and uniformly applied law that uniquely serves its legitimate purpose.
- Previous precedent confirms that Parliament does not need to find some 'objective "minimum rights infringed" point along the spectrum.'
- The playtime requirement clearly does not create "two classes of citizenship."
Soggeh T. Oast
Minister of Justice
Kingdom of Alexandria
