seeing as i don't want to read a 22 page draft for some legislation pertaining to a niche leisure-time activity in a state i am likely never going to visit again... can you please add some more substance to your OP? i don't imagine many people are going to read that PDF, especially seeing as it is clearly still an early draft stage and hasn't been finalized yet.
how has an illegal slot machine ban ended up "banning access to the internet"? obviously the legal documents have to have an open-ended definition of what a 'slot machine' is, otherwise wily people will start devising slightly-different devices or systems that allows the activity to go on, unpunished. the wording of legal documents is normally quite abstract and formally vague. are you aware of the different methods of judicial interpretation? there are several 'laws' a legal official can use when appealing to legislation or statute. no interpretations of this document, or whatever clause you are talking about, is going to 'literally' ban all computers that can connect to the internet. in fact very few areas of law or statutory governance ever involve a strictly-legal interpretation of documents, normally it is the judges discretion, except in the extreme cases of child-porn or murder or some such offence where the application of law and tariffs for punishment are very rigorously set.
i hope you're not being this stupid?
Last edited by Uzique The Lesser (2013-07-10 11:30:36)