Linkey Posted January 4 Posted January 4 I see that in modern countries, which call themselves democratic, a hidden authoritarianism is mainteined by votings where the citizens can vote for both something good and something bad in ac single vote. For example, the Americans voted for Trump because they disliked the inflation and transgenders in big sport, but now Trump or Vance will say that they voted for prohibiting abortions and stopping the support of Ukraine. In Russia, a sample of such packed voting was e.g. the referendum of 2020 for changes in the constitution; it can be said, that the Russians mostly voted for new parts like “A marriage is a union between a man and a woman”, but after that Putin was saying that they voted for his next term. It seems evident that when the Russians voted for Putin in 2024 – they voted not for such things as blocking the youtube. I am starting to think now that the main reason of their vote for Putin was the following – if a democratic candidate won the presidential elections, a civil way could start in Russian. Putin has done very much for such situation. This is similar to Syria – Asad has allowed the Syrians to choose only between him and a civil war.
swansont Posted January 4 Posted January 4 10 hours ago, Linkey said: I see that in modern countries, which call themselves democratic, a hidden authoritarianism is mainteined by votings where the citizens can vote for both something good and something bad in ac single vote. As opposed to what? You say this as if it’s not the inherent nature of choice. How do you vote for only part of a person?
TheVat Posted January 4 Posted January 4 And we do have split ticket voting here, where you can vote for, say, a populist oaf for president on the basis of one hot-button issue you like him for, but then vote for the opposing party for your Congress person(s) so as to impose a restraint through the legislative side on issues where you don't trust the oaf. The Constitutional separation of powers is, in theory, designed to restrain autocratic tendencies. I guess we'll see.
exchemist Posted Sunday at 11:49 AM Posted Sunday at 11:49 AM On 1/4/2025 at 4:00 AM, Linkey said: I see that in modern countries, which call themselves democratic, a hidden authoritarianism is mainteined by votings where the citizens can vote for both something good and something bad in ac single vote. For example, the Americans voted for Trump because they disliked the inflation and transgenders in big sport, but now Trump or Vance will say that they voted for prohibiting abortions and stopping the support of Ukraine. In Russia, a sample of such packed voting was e.g. the referendum of 2020 for changes in the constitution; it can be said, that the Russians mostly voted for new parts like “A marriage is a union between a man and a woman”, but after that Putin was saying that they voted for his next term. It seems evident that when the Russians voted for Putin in 2024 – they voted not for such things as blocking the youtube. I am starting to think now that the main reason of their vote for Putin was the following – if a democratic candidate won the presidential elections, a civil way could start in Russian. Putin has done very much for such situation. This is similar to Syria – Asad has allowed the Syrians to choose only between him and a civil war. This is inevitable in systems of representative democracy, because you are voting for a person to represent you in government. You are not even voting just for the policy positions they announce, but for their wisdom and judgement in dealing with whatever unforeseen issues arise during the tenure of the government. The alternative is to hold direct referenda on individual issues. The snags with that are you will be asking people to vote repeatedly, leading to fatigue and so to low turnout, calling into question the legitimacy of the outcome of the vote, and, more seriously, the very high risk that people vote without really understanding the issue and the consequences of each decision they vote on. The Swiss manage to do it, to a limited degree, but they have had decades of practice. There is no perfect system. Representative democracy is rough and ready but does at least prevent tyranny, so long as the limits on terms of government remain respected. 1
Linkey Posted 22 hours ago Author Posted 22 hours ago On 1/5/2025 at 2:49 PM, exchemist said: The alternative is to hold direct referenda on individual issues. The snags with that are you will be asking people to vote repeatedly, leading to fatigue and so to low turnout, calling into question the legitimacy of the outcome of the vote, and, more seriously, the very high risk that people vote without really understanding the issue and the consequences of each decision they vote on. The Swiss manage to do it, to a limited degree, but they have had decades of practice. I have heard that in California there is something similar to the system in the Switzerland? However I am sure it does not work propebly, because the referendum can be initiated only by two ruling parties and nobody will suggest a referendum relating really important things for the people, like the cryptocurrencies legalization. On 1/4/2025 at 5:11 PM, swansont said: As opposed to what? You say this as if it’s not the inherent nature of choice. How do you vote for only part of a person? Currently it is possible to perform referendums via the internet. so a referendum each week is indeed possible. But the ruling politicians are not motivated to implement this...
exchemist Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago 2 hours ago, Linkey said: I have heard that in California there is something similar to the system in the Switzerland? However I am sure it does not work propebly, because the referendum can be initiated only by two ruling parties and nobody will suggest a referendum relating really important things for the people, like the cryptocurrencies legalization. Currently it is possible to perform referendums via the internet. so a referendum each week is indeed possible. But the ruling politicians are not motivated to implement this... Please don’t make a statement and then stick a question mark at the end. It is unclear whether you are making a statement or asking a question. Which is it? Secondly, you have failed to engage at all with the reasons I have given you for why democracy by referendum is a stupid and unworkable idea, preferring instead to hide in cheap and lazy conspiracy thinking about “ruling politicians”. This is puerile. Do you want an adult discussion of this subject or not?
Genady Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago 2 hours ago, Linkey said: Currently it is possible to perform referendums via the internet. so a referendum each week is indeed possible. There is no need in referendums anymore. The data are there, in social media, forums, TV, papers, etc. Everything people talk and write about. All the answers. The tool to collect and summarize these data is also there. It is called, AI. /sarcasm/
dimreepr Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago 3 hours ago, Linkey said: Currently it is possible to perform referendums via the internet. so a referendum each week is indeed possible. But the ruling politicians are not motivated to implement this... How do you you differentiate between referendum and democracy, in your fantasy political league???
swansont Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago 4 hours ago, Linkey said: Currently it is possible to perform referendums via the internet. so a referendum each week is indeed possible. But the ruling politicians are not motivated to implement this... We’ve been over why this is a bad idea, but beyond that, I don’t see how it solves your conundrum. Surely a referendum can be both good and bad? We have referendums in the US, and it’s not like they universally get huge landslide victories. There’s always something bad about them, in the view of some of the people.
Linkey Posted 13 hours ago Author Posted 13 hours ago 5 hours ago, exchemist said: Secondly, you have failed to engage at all with the reasons I have given you for why democracy by referendum is a stupid and unworkable idea, preferring instead to hide in cheap and lazy conspiracy thinking about “ruling politicians”. This is puerile. Do you want an adult discussion of this subject or not [Patiently] So you think that current political system in the Western countries is better? The system when half of the US population hate the elected president, and recently another half hated previous president?
KJW Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago (edited) 1 hour ago, Linkey said: [Patiently] So you think that current political system in the Western countries is better? The system when half of the US population hate the elected president, and recently another half hated previous president? The way I see it, different people have different ideas about how their country should be run, and therefore it is not possible to please everyone, regardless of the political system. That's not to say that all political systems are equal in terms of benefiting the population. But to think that one can solve the problems inherent in political systems simply by providing more democracy is misguided due to the fundamental differences within the population. There is such a thing as "tyranny of the majority". Edited 12 hours ago by KJW
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now