Silence does not equal consent
Silence Does Not Equal Consent
Category: Governance Principles Page status: Working
Statement
Silence does not equal consent.
Purpose
To clarify that lack of response cannot be treated as permission or agreement.
Explanation
Consent requires clear recognition and lawful standing.
Absence of objection may arise from many circumstances — time, process, uncertainty, or incomplete communication.
None of these transfer authority.
Function
This principle prevents assumption from replacing authorization.
It protects the Nation from unintended surrender of rights or meaning.
What This Prevents
- passive approval being inferred
- pressure through deadlines
- reinterpretation by default
- authority claimed through inaction
Relationship to Dialogue
Open communication remains encouraged.
However, agreement must be explicit and properly grounded.
Result
Legitimacy remains tied to clear, recognized consent.