For some reason liberals love to idealize Athens as the home of democracy, our historical tradition and origins. — thedeadidea
↪thedeadidea You are still talking about "democracy" as if it was synonymous with "the best form of government." If you remove what makes democracy a democracy, you may or may not end up with a better form of government, but what you won't have is a democracy. — SophistiCat
have exactly NOT done what YOU ACCUSE me of which is blind prejudice. Nowhere have I said 'black people should not vote because they are black' or anything to the effect.
— thedeadidea
Where have I done this? — SophistiCat
↪thedeadidea You don't understand what "democracy" means, do you? As StreetlightX points out, the sine qua non of democracy is that the governed have a say in how they are governed. You are saying, in essence, "I want democracy without all that democracy stuff." If you don't like democracy, then say so.
It's funny how words acquire such stable positive or negative connotations that people forget about their meaning and remember only the connotation. It's like someone saying "I am not a racist, I just hate niggers." — SophistiCat
Lazy edgelord rubbish.
— @StreetlightX
What on earth is "edgelord rubbish"? I mean, I'm guessing it's bad... — Isaac
↪thedeadidea
That is quite a program.
Who will execute it? — Valentinus
↪thedeadidea
That is quite a program.
Who will execute it? — Valentinus
You have identified some valid problems with universal suffrage in a democracy, but that's easy. What alternative do you propose? Identify the "right" people? I don't see a perfect way to do this. In universal suffrage, there's a chance the idiocy on all sides cancel each other out.If driving a car is a privilege and not a right, an activity one requires a licence for why should the fate of a nation and world be decided on the whim of people who are possibly contemptuously stupid ? — thedeadidea
You have identified some valid problems with universal suffrage in a democracy, but that's easy. What alternative do — Relativist
I may be dumb, but I am genuine.
I have no idea who would bring about the changes you ask for. — Valentinus
I may be dumb, but I am genuine.
I have no idea who would bring about the changes you ask for. — Valentinus
You want to be an architect you need a license
You want to be a lawyer you need a license
You want to be a doctor you need a license
You want to be an accountant you need a license
You want to own a business in many places you need a license
You want to drive a car you need a license
You want to be a citizen you need a certificate (if you are an immigrant)
In nearly every other sphere of life where one party has some kind of liability or responsibility to another one is required to have a proof of competency... In all cases but one and that is the current Disneyland Democracy being argued for where even the Village Idiot called Frank gets to be a special little snowflake. — thedeadidea
↪thedeadidea The way I see it, the problem is not so much that uninformed and ignorant people are allowed to vote - good luck rescinding that right without violence, let alone getting people to agree with it - but that we celebrate and amplify the voice of uninformed and ignorant people.
Why? Because drama and conflict outsells intelligent discussion any day of the week. Polarity more readily stimulates a response from even the most intelligent and rational citizen, so they give air time to whingers and devil’s advocates, generating an assumption that what they’re saying has value other than simply stimulating response from others.
Rescinding the right to vote from the uninformed and ignorant will only generate a different form of class conflict. It’s not a solution, and to tout it as such only shows a lack of sympathy and an ignorance of what it’s like to be denied access to information, or to be raised ignorant.
That the age cap on democracy fails to ensure a standard of voting capacity is an indictment on our education and value systems. What happens historically when the ‘ruling elite’ dictate the criterion on which one can become enfranchised? Do you not see the problem with your supposed ‘utopia’? — Possibility
Everyone will get to rule eventually... I will make a drug induced VR euthanasia available so everyone can rule. Whilst us normies will get the benefit of you ceasing to be... It is win-win.thedeadidea LOL. Alright. Then I have nothing against your position, so long as I get to rule. — YuZhonglu
Look to those who can't follow along... I am arguing something more along the lines of this stupid, gullible people should not be allowed to vote. — thedeadidea
A question if I may:
Are you suggesting that YOU get to decide who the "stuid and gullible" are?
If not...how will that be decided? — Frank Apisa
thedeadidea
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A question if I may:
Are you suggesting that YOU get to decide who the "stuid and gullible" are?
If not...how will that be decided? — Frank Apisa
Having anticipated this I have already pointed to any number of standards we have allowed to be culturally imposed in multiple ways in life. To the point of also including a citizenship test for immigration. The current litmus test is merely age.... you just need to exist and be born within a certain range of latitude and longitude and hey presto you are an adult citizen and you get a vote.
My argument is more let's not make it arbitrary anymore and tie it to any number of standards already produced whilst also promoting education in civics and critical thinking/reflection things already taught and have been taught for decades.
Moreover I am not saying this test should be a one time deal that is you fail you fail forever, you can take it infinity times... But you have to pass it much like you have to pass a drivers test in order to drive...
Given that your question just has me repeating myself may I ask a question...
Do you read what others write..... or do you more read what you want to read? — thedeadidea
Sure you can ask your question, but I see it as a rather strange question!
Like most (like everyone, I suppose), I read what I want to read.
You do also. Right?
Anyway, I agree it is arbitrary to base voting rights on age...but at least that has to do with something easily defined and authenticated. ("How long you been alive and can you prove it?")
"Are you 'smart' enough to vote"...is not so easily defined. And what you (or a majority) might consider a minimum of intelligence to vote...might exclude people better prepared to make a reasonable selection of whom they want to represent them than those you deem to be "intelligent enough."
In any case, "the current litmus test" is NOT merely age. The desire to vote is also a test. One must go through the process of registering...and completing a ballot.
That desire to vote...seems to me to go a long way toward meeting a standard of being intelligent enough to make a reasonable decision.
Said another way: I'd love to see more people qualify to vote as opposed to seeing fewer qualified due to the standards you advocate imposing. — Frank Apisa
If the entire notion of biased of reading is meaningfully codified to subjective experience as the meaningful standard.... sure I do... — thedeadidea
Insofar as it is hard to define.... well Cambridge Analytica launched a targeted advertising campaign and identified their victims well... Although I wouldn't say it is as 2+2 =4 we are getting a lot better at it.Big Data will take care of that proofing but Big Data will take over everything including democracy more and more.
No, I realize there is no nation-saving solution. I primarily wanted to shift your attention from the need for voters who are better informed to the need for improved critical thinking. Not only is that the more serious problem, it is also more feasible to address. Addressing it does not mean fixing it, it means improving it - perhaps little by little, step by step - drawing attention to this as a problem, striving to improve our own critical thinking, and finally working towards small improvements in education (informal education and eventually formal). It needn't be autocratically imposed in formal education; it can be through improved textbooks by authors who realize the problem exists. Even individual teachers who embrace the issue could address it in some limited way. Eventually perhaps electives in critical thinking skills could be offered. Still a bit of a utopian vision, I admit, but still a reasonable principle to have in mind.if you are hoping for a nation-saving solution with the syllabus, pension for standardized testing and bureaucratic silliness let alone bold education then it is hard. — thedeadidea
No, I realize there is no nation-saving solution. I primarily wanted to shift your attention from the need for voters who are better informed to the need for improved critical thinking. Not only is that the more serious problem, it is also more feasible to address. Addressing it does not mean fixing it, it means improving it - perhaps little by little, step by step - drawing attention to this as a problem, striving to improve our own critical thinking, and finally working towards small improvements in education (informal education and eventually formal). It needn't be autocratically imposed in formal education; it can be through improved textbooks by authors who realize the problem exists. Even individual teachers who embrace the issue could address it in some limited way. Eventually perhaps electives in critical thinking skills could be offered. Still a bit of a utopian vision, I admit, but still a reasonable principle to have in min — Relativist
How can you burden people to make decisions many of whom are unqualified to do so and call it a 'right'? — thedeadidea
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