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
S
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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
On whether or not they can spell the word "stupid". — S
With regard to votes, [Aristotle's] debate centers on the benefit of oligarchy versus equality for all, the latter of which is of course, appears controlled by the poor, because there are always more of them. And I will try to summarize it because it is quite long. If you have say 2 rich and 4 poor voting equally, one of the poor quickly realizes they can be more powerful by voting with the rich. If there 2 rich and 6 poor, the poor realize they can split in two and each group can partner either with the rich group or the other poor group to win. And the latter example can collapse into the first, because there 1 person realizes, again, he can switch groups to make a 4:4 split. So what naturally evolves is a system where the rich and poor have equal power decided by a tiny swing group, or even a single person.
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