Decisions may not foreclose future choice.

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Purpose

This principle protects the freedom of future generations to make their own lawful determinations.

Principle

Decisions may not foreclose future choice.

Meaning

Present leaders must avoid actions that permanently remove the ability of successors to interpret, govern, or adapt. Authority today cannot erase the decision-making space of tomorrow.

Choice is part of inheritance.

What It Means to Foreclose

  • Removing legal pathways.
  • Eliminating jurisdiction.
  • Binding future people without exit.
  • Making outcomes irreversible.
  • Narrowing governance options beyond recovery.

Why This Matters

  • Preserves autonomy.
  • Maintains legitimacy.
  • Encourages humility.
  • Supports continuity.

Freedom Across Time

Each generation must retain room to respond to its own conditions. Predetermining everything denies responsibility to those who follow.

Examples

  • Permanent alienation of land.
  • Agreements preventing future reinterpretation.
  • Structural changes that cannot be undone.
  • Loss of institutional knowledge.

Relationship to Responsibility

Respect for future choice is part of acting in trust.

Risks if Ignored

  • Future governance becomes constrained.
  • Conflict may arise.
  • Trust weakens.
  • Authority appears overextended.

Safeguards

  • Include review provisions.
  • Avoid language of extinction or finality.
  • Seek broad counsel.
  • Evaluate reversibility.

Cross-references

Notes

Future development may define degrees of foreclosure and mitigation strategies.

Source Citations