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- 28 de Dic, 2016
It's fine the way it is.
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That's an oversimplification. People who don't own property still stand to lose by bad decisions, plus there's that whole paying taxes thing.Only property-owners and veterans should vote. Only those with something to lose should be allowed to play the game.
People who think it is overly authoritarian either didn't understand the book, or only saw the movie.I'm the one who does not think starship troopers was too authoritarian.
fuck electoral districts.
Gerrymandering is the problem, though, and it's rather difficult to solve. Senators are elected by the entire state population, and if you elected House Reps that way, you'd get a homogenous bunch of exactly the same people out of all of California, and they have a ridiculous number of reps. In a sense, that would deny regional populations any representation at all in the House.
Unless you went to some proportional representation system, which isn't going to happen without a constitutional amendment, it would actually break a lot of things.
this is true, but I do think it would be a more fully representative system and less loaded with dumb fucks.The problem is all these alternate systems could just as easily be rigged and with the near impossibility of amending the Constitution easily (which is actually a good thing), it's not like you could dynamically react to this to fix these things in real time.
Thank you.People who think it is overly authoritarian either didn't understand the book, or only saw the movie.
People who think it is overly authoritarian either didn't understand the book, or only saw the movie.
That's an oversimplification. People who don't own property still stand to lose by bad decisions, plus there's that whole paying taxes thing.
That said, I think there's a lot to be said for a system that requires people to earn their vote. I'm the weirdo among my friends because I'm the one who does not think starship troopers was too authoritarian. Like, I don't appreciate that some shithead who thinks the earth is 6,000 years old and that obama's birth certificate is fake no matter what evidence there is, or that vaccines are a conspiracy because they've never even known anyone who had measles... I don't like the fact that person should get a vote that counts as much as mine. Every other form of power with reaching consequences that affect other lives, we say comes with responsibility, but not voting?
I fully admit the problem of judging who's fit to participate and who's not.you realise a congenitally wheelchair-bound person would also be a second-class citizen in a stratocracy though
I fully admit the problem of judging who's fit to participate and who's not.
But shouldn't there be something? You have to take a written test to get a driver's license, because while you might think no one should impede on you driving, the fact is that you can't drive without impacting the other people around you. Why shouldn't you have to take a test to prove you understand the things you're voting on? Like, it could be simple questions: "this vote is for judicial seat 12 in your district. Please describe what the person who wins this vote will be responsible for." or something to that effect, to demonstrate you understand that "muslim" is not a type of fabric before you vote against it. (A more fitting comparison than the DMV might be that immigrants are required to take knowledge tests as part of legally entering the country. Why are voters not held to a similar standard?)
And yes, I am aware that "tests" were used to keep black people from voting in the Jim Crow era. I know a lot more thought would have to go into how to implement it. I just think "fuck it, give it to everyone and let the chips fall where they may" is not a good system. People don't use power constructively when they don't even appreciate having it.