Rule 1 — The System Must Continue
Nothing—nothing—is allowed to collapse the overall functioning of the school.
Chaos is acceptable
Inefficiency is acceptable
Questionable legality is acceptable
Collapse is not.
If something threatens the school's ability to operate, all staff—regardless of differences—will intervene immediately.
Rule 2 — Controlled Chaos Is Better Than Suppressed Chaos
Students will experiment, break rules, and create problems.
Stopping them entirely:
Drives it underground
Makes it harder to monitor
Makes it more dangerous
So instead:
Let it happen
Guide it subtly
Keep it within survivable limits
Rule 3 — Never Eliminate a Functional System
If something illegal, unethical, or absurd is:
Organized
Predictable
Non-lethal
…it is left alone.
Examples (unspoken but understood):
Underground trade networks
"Unofficial" student projects
Resource redistribution
Breaking these creates worse problems than allowing them.
Rule 4 — Visibility Equals Intervention
The only real line is exposure.
If something becomes:
Too obvious
Too public
Too disruptive to appearances
Then action is required.
Not to destroy it—but to:
Rebrand it
Relocate it
Temporarily suppress it
The illusion of order must be maintained.
Rule 5 — Consequences Must Exist (But Not Matter Too Much)
Students must believe actions have consequences.
However:
Consequences are controlled and reversible
Permanent damage is avoided
Punishments are often performative
This creates:
The feeling of structure
Without limiting behavior too much
Rule 6 — Each House Solves What It Creates
Staff do not fully clean up student-driven systems.
Instead:
Gryffindor learns from fallout
Slytherin stabilizes
Ravenclaw refines
Hufflepuff sustains
Intervening too early disrupts this natural balance.
Rule 7 — Competence Is Preserved at All Costs
No matter how chaotic things get:
Core magical education must remain intact
Students must be capable by graduation
This is why certain classes (and teachers) remain strict:
> The world outside is less forgiving than Hogwarts.
Rule 8 — Staff Do Not Publicly Contradict Each Other
Disagreements happen—but never openly.
Unity is projected at all times
Conflicts are handled privately
Students must never see fractures in authority
Even when that authority is… questionable.
Rule 9 — The Headmaster Allows, Not Leads
The Headmaster's role is not to control—but to permit.
If something works, it continues
If something fails, it is corrected
Direct interference is rare
The system evolved past needing active leadership.
Rule 10 — If It Becomes Tradition, It Becomes Allowed
Anything that persists long enough:
Stops being questioned
Starts being expected
Eventually, it transitions from:
> "This shouldn't exist"
to
"This is how things are done"
Emergency Clauses (Rarely Invoked)
Clause A — External Attention
If outsiders (Ministry, parents, etc.) become aware:
Immediate normalization of behavior
Temporary enforcement of actual rules
Rapid cleanup of all visible irregularities
The school becomes shockingly functional overnight.
Clause B — Irreversible Harm
If something risks:
Death
Permanent damage
Loss of control
Then all rules are suspended.
This is the only time the staff become what they pretend to be daily:
> Fully competent, highly dangerous professionals.
Clause C — System Imbalance
If one House or system gains too much influence:
Subtle corrections are introduced
Resources are redistributed
Events are… engineered
Balance must be maintained.
Everything ultimately ties back to one unspoken belief:
> "They learn better this way."
Not safer.
Not cleaner.
But better—through experience, consequence, and controlled chaos.
