Probably not. But it depends on what you mean by 'rules'.
Read your governing documents to understand how 'rules' are changed by either votes of the membership or by the board.
Your CC&Rs -- the land use document, and your By-Laws -- the operation of the business -- each require a percentage of the membership to vote in favour of any amendment to either. You can find the percentage in each document. Some By-Laws can, however, be amended by board vote.
Rules -- which generally address behaviour of people and pets within the community -- are written by the board, approved by them in a duly constituted board meeting, documented in the minutes, then published to all owners and residents. Rules are also a key part of any welcome packet delivered to new residents.
Rules are best generally based in the other governing documents, municipal laws or other reasonable tenets of civil community living.
No. A corporation might not even be a stock corporation and have a change of directors. Directors don't even have to be stockholders and thus there may be no shares to transfer.
yes
Yes
Since the condominium association is probably registered as a corporation of some type, there are voting rights and procedures for electing and removing members of the governing trust. Owners, however, cannot be 'removed', until the property is sold to a new owner.
The association changed its name from The Retired Officers Association (TROA) to the Military Officers Association of America (MOAA), on January 1, 2003.
California Association of Student Councils's motto is 'Change the future'.
That would be a matter for the Board of Directors to determine.
What the change of Director procedure
the freedom to speak their minds and also to change them, without fear of public criticism.
Immediate family members would not be able to change someone's life insurance beneficiary without power of attorney. The life insurance policy is a legally recognized document signed by the owner with a designated recipient.
It's a non-profit organization, not owned by anyone. Girl Scouts of the USA is a non-profit membership organization and does not have private owners. Instead, the organization has a controlling board, the National Board of Directors. GSUSA members control the organization through the delegate structure; by electing delegates who then elect the board members and change the by-laws.
A board could attempt this kind of action -- that is, from Wikipedia: "declaring a person or group of persons guilty of some crime and punishing them without privilege of a judicial trial." This kind of change to the By-laws probably requires some kind of vote of the membership: your governing documents detail this process. An owner/ resident/ guest punished under such an action is best advised to seek counsel. Some will call this kind of action on the part of the board as simply 'outrageous'.