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MeDeFe wrote:And in my experience the army is not a place that churns out freely and critically thinking individuals.
MeDeFe wrote:Tell me, why not go the opposite way and only let the "thinkers" vote?
suggs wrote:Ambrose, I stopped reading your post after you admitted that your "idea" IS basically Plato's Philospopher Kings.
Now yer man Plato had some good ideas, BUT THIS WAS NOT ONE OF THEM.
Incredibly influential yes-and you know which movement he most influenced (via Hegel and Nietzsche)..yep, FASCISM.
You say you havent heard much of a counter argument than "its fascism"-but there is no further argument.
Plato's idea was to have the intellectual elite rule the Republic. He also proposed infanticide and eugenics as a way of getting rid of the weak.
There is a reason why Karl Popper's masterpiece "THE OPEN SOCIETY AND ITS ENEMIES" had one volume on Marx, and the other on Plato-because Plato is the enemy of democracy and equity/equality.
Don't read Plato-read Rousseau, and have some HOPE in your fellow man.
heavycola wrote:You have an interesting brain.
OnlyAmbrose wrote:Look at the variety of opinions among the "intelligencia" of CC. There are smart conservatives, dumb conservatives, smart liberals, dumb liberals, smart atheists, dumb atheists, smarth theists, and dumb theists.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Neoteny wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:Look at the variety of opinions among the "intelligencia" of CC. There are smart conservatives, dumb conservatives, smart liberals, dumb liberals, smart atheists, dumb atheists, smarth theists, and dumb theists.
I think we should have a thread about this. And if we ever decide that debate forum/usergroup would be a good idea, we should definitely be elitist and call it the CC Intelligencia.![]()
Just in case my humor is a bit vague on this one, I'm being about 83% serious...
OnlyAmbrose wrote:Neoteny wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:Look at the variety of opinions among the "intelligencia" of CC. There are smart conservatives, dumb conservatives, smart liberals, dumb liberals, smart atheists, dumb atheists, smarth theists, and dumb theists.
I think we should have a thread about this. And if we ever decide that debate forum/usergroup would be a good idea, we should definitely be elitist and call it the CC Intelligentsia.![]()
Just in case my humor is a bit vague on this one, I'm being about 83% serious...
The ironic thing is that I spelled "intelligentsia" wrong.![]()
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
I would have said "Masterdebaters."Neoteny wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:Look at the variety of opinions among the "intelligencia" of CC. There are smart conservatives, dumb conservatives, smart liberals, dumb liberals, smart atheists, dumb atheists, smarth theists, and dumb theists.
I think we should have a thread about this. And if we ever decide that debate forum/usergroup would be a good idea, we should definitely be elitist and call it the CC Intelligentsia.![]()
Just in case my humor is a bit vague on this one, I'm being about 83% serious...
muy_thaiguy wrote:I would have said "Masterdebaters."Neoteny wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:Look at the variety of opinions among the "intelligencia" of CC. There are smart conservatives, dumb conservatives, smart liberals, dumb liberals, smart atheists, dumb atheists, smarth theists, and dumb theists.
I think we should have a thread about this. And if we ever decide that debate forum/usergroup would be a good idea, we should definitely be elitist and call it the CC Intelligentsia.![]()
Just in case my humor is a bit vague on this one, I'm being about 83% serious...
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
heavycola wrote:
Ambrose:
Interesting argument.
But:
Can you really describe black people voting for obama, or women voting for hillary, as selfish? If you were black, and you felt obama was going to better represent a group that you belong to, why wouldn't you vote that way? I think you are implying motives that might not exist to great swathes of people.
National service: is the army the best place to adopt a balanced world view? Won't restricting voting to veterans skew policy towards the military anyway? Does the army really churn out socially responsible citizens? Should pacifists be denied the vote because they don't hold the correct opinions? I am not a pacifist, but there is no way in hell i would join the army in peacetime because I am not a patriot. I do, however, have a strong vested interest in shaping my country's direction for the good of me, my fellow brits and the world at large. Am I a selfish voter? Socially irresponsible? Should i be disenfranchised because of my political opinions?
Sorry, i just asked a load of questionsBut i think your plan is dangerous. Our countries' societies are made up of wonderfully broad spectra of people and it is a basic tenet of our political systems that they are ALL represented. I DO think that political apathy is perverse and pathetic, but, hey, it's still a free country. A restriction of the right to vote - of ANY sort - is a curtailment of that freedom.
OnlyAmbrose wrote:MeDeFe wrote:And in my experience the army is not a place that churns out freely and critically thinking individuals.
The idea isn't really free thought... but the idea isn't indoctrination either. The idea is to narrow down the voting populace to those who: a) care about their right to vote enough to earn it, "invest" in the welfare of the country if you will and b) are willing to put the welfare of the nation before their own welfare.
For this system to work, though, military service must be very difficult, and civilian life must be very easy. That means that the system only works if civilians have the same (or actually, more) civil liberties than military personnel, and the same liberties as veterans, all except the right to vote.
OnlyAmbrose wrote:MeDeFe wrote:Tell me, why not go the opposite way and only let the "thinkers" vote?
Because "thinkers" are equally likely to "think" wrongly as non-thinkers. Look at the variety of opinions among the "intelligentsia" of CC. There are smart conservatives, dumb conservatives, smart liberals, dumb liberals, smart atheists, dumb atheists, smarth theists, and dumb theists. I think the point where the line needs to be drawn on who gets to do the decision making shouldn't necessarily go with the smartest, but rather, those with the most demonstrated interest in the society as a whole as opposed to their own special interests.
I am aware that the latter idea of putting society before the individual is distinctly un-American, but once again I'm not considering this for the current American system. And once again, individual liberty or expression is NOT restricted.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
greenoaks wrote:you test would be great if we lived in a democracy but we don't. we live in republics where we select someone to represent us. all we need to believe is the person we are selecting will understand those things, whatever those things are. so your test should only apply to candidates and the results published.
Talapus wrote:I'm far more pissed that mandy and his thought process were right from the get go....damn you mandy.
mandalorian2298 wrote:greenoaks wrote:you test would be great if we lived in a democracy but we don't. we live in republics where we select someone to represent us. all we need to believe is the person we are selecting will understand those things, whatever those things are. so your test should only apply to candidates and the results published.
If you have no understanding of those things, how can you determine which candidate can or can't understand those things?
greenoaks wrote:mandalorian2298 wrote:greenoaks wrote:you test would be great if we lived in a democracy but we don't. we live in republics where we select someone to represent us. all we need to believe is the person we are selecting will understand those things, whatever those things are. so your test should only apply to candidates and the results published.
If you have no understanding of those things, how can you determine which candidate can or can't understand those things?
it is called trust
it was proposed that voters get tested and only those who pass get to vote. bad system as large portions of the public will end up feeling disenfranchised. this can lead to civil unrest.
i suggested the candidates are tested to ensure they are capable of understanding the issues and making an informed decision, the results of their understanding published. afterall they are the ones who actually make the decisions so their ability to understand them is important.
voters can see that candidate 'a' is strong on international affairs but weak on the economy, candidate 'b' is very strong on environmental issues but hasn't a clue about anything else, etc. voters are then able to vote for candidates they believe have the ability to deal with the issues that are important to them, even though they as voters may not have the educational, work or life experiences/background to fully understand those issues themselves.
i don't know about where you live but we sometimes get people elected who were famous for something but have no idea about politics. (an ultra marathon runner comes to mind)
Talapus wrote:I'm far more pissed that mandy and his thought process were right from the get go....damn you mandy.
greenoaks wrote:mandalorian2298 wrote:greenoaks wrote:you test would be great if we lived in a democracy but we don't. we live in republics where we select someone to represent us. all we need to believe is the person we are selecting will understand those things, whatever those things are. so your test should only apply to candidates and the results published.
If you have no understanding of those things, how can you determine which candidate can or can't understand those things?
it is called trust
it was proposed that voters get tested and only those who pass get to vote. bad system as large portions of the public will end up feeling disenfranchised. this can lead to civil unrest.
i suggested the candidates are tested to ensure they are capable of understanding the issues and making an informed decision, the results of their understanding published. afterall they are the ones who actually make the decisions so their ability to understand them is important.
voters can see that candidate 'a' is strong on international affairs but weak on the economy, candidate 'b' is very strong on environmental issues but hasn't a clue about anything else, etc. voters are then able to vote for candidates they believe have the ability to deal with the issues that are important to them, even though they as voters may not have the educational, work or life experiences/background to fully understand those issues themselves.
i don't know about where you live but we sometimes get people elected who were famous for something but have no idea about politics. (an ultra marathon runner comes to mind)
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
MeDeFe wrote:Even a difficult military service would not be enough to change this very much, as I said, the goal of voting is long-term, and short term hardships in order to achieve it will probably appear to be worth it. And then there's the social pressure that you will never be able to eliminate.
It's voting time again and someone ask an other person if he's going, "No, I'm not allowed", "Why? Are you afraid of the military? Don't you love your country? Are you not interested in what happens to the place you live in?" And that's just what you'll get at election time. Voting would become a status symbol, it's a right that some people have and others don't. Imagine the pressure parents would put on their kids, for some reason they take great pride in what their children achieve, even if they are grown up already.
MeDeFe wrote:I'm beginning to see a flaw in your reasoning here, caring enough about ones right to vote in order to be willing to earn it does not imply that you also care about the well-being of your country as a whole. As I pointed out earlier, in a system where there are no negative consequences at all attached to not doing military service, serving in the military can be a fairly reliable indicator of patriotism in the sense that a person is willing to die for "his" country. But as soon as there are negative consequences this becomes secondary because you will have a lot of people looking after their own interests. Their interest in this case could be the long-term goal of influencing the politics of the country in which they live (notice the contrast between "his country" and geographical happenstance), this does not mean they want to influence them towards the good of everyone, they might just as well only want to favour what will benefit themselves.
MeDeFe wrote:Even a difficult military service would not be enough to change this very much, as I said, the goal of voting is long-term
MeDeFe wrote:And then there's the social pressure that you will never be able to eliminate.
It's voting time again and someone ask an other person if he's going, "No, I'm not allowed", "Why? Are you afraid of the military? Don't you love your country? Are you not interested in what happens to the place you live in?"
MeDeFe wrote:Ambrose, thinking differently is not thinking wrongly, thinking "wrongly" is more along the lines of not being rational, not being logical, not taking more than one side of an issue into account, not being able to see the difference between a good and a bad argument, not being able to see where the other side might be coming from and why they have an opinion different from your own. As I already said in an earlier post: if you are faced with a dozen different proposals, your wish to vote for the best is not much use unless you can also analyze the proposals and decide for yourself which you think will do the most good.
Curmudgeonx wrote:I believe that Suggs was correct in his cursory analysis that the OP was proposing a Plato-esque "Philospher-King". I was on the brink of posting something similar when I got to page 4 or so and saw Suggs beat me to it.
The OP is rather dismissive of Sugg's viewpoint that the OP's position was similar in its reasoning to Plato's Republic. If you want to read into the philosophy of law and government OP, you must start with the Republic, skip over the religious folks in the middle ages, the reactionary drunk with liberty Frenchmen, and get to Nozick, Rawls, Milton Friedman and Popper in the 20th century.
OnlyAmbrose wrote:MeDeFe wrote:I'm beginning to see a flaw in your reasoning here, caring enough about ones right to vote in order to be willing to earn it does not imply that you also care about the well-being of your country as a whole. As I pointed out earlier, in a system where there are no negative consequences at all attached to not doing military service, serving in the military can be a fairly reliable indicator of patriotism in the sense that a person is willing to die for "his" country. But as soon as there are negative consequences this becomes secondary because you will have a lot of people looking after their own interests. Their interest in this case could be the long-term goal of influencing the politics of the country in which they live (notice the contrast between "his country" and geographical happenstance), this does not mean they want to influence them towards the good of everyone, they might just as well only want to favour what will benefit themselves.
I understand your point, but not the conclusion you draw. Firstly, the loss of the right to cast one vote isn't necessarily a "negative consequence," most especially when considering the negative consequences attached to military service. People are generally not willing to risk life and limb over one vote. What's more, the system in Heinlein's novel is such that the hardships of military service (just short of Spartan-like) make the "positive consequence" of gaining the right to vote completely overwhelmed by the difficulty.
I probably didn't make my point to well when I used the phrase "earning the right to vote" several times. Mostly because the idea behind the system is that in anyone's "cost-benefit analysis" of the decision to join and/or finish two years in the military, it would be far more beneficial to oneself NOT to join the military.
So conditions are such that they are as similar as possible to the ideal conditions you described when you said: "As I pointed out earlier, in a system where there are no negative consequences at all attached to not doing military service, serving in the military can be a fairly reliable indicator of patriotism in the sense that a person is willing to die for "his" country."MeDeFe wrote:Even a difficult military service would not be enough to change this very much, as I said, the goal of voting is long-term
You would be one of the few people to say that gambling your life simply for the right to cast one vote is worth it. Again, I'm starting to regret saying "earning the right to vote" now, because i warped the message I'm trying to get across.MeDeFe wrote:And then there's the social pressure that you will never be able to eliminate.
It's voting time again and someone ask an other person if he's going, "No, I'm not allowed", "Why? Are you afraid of the military? Don't you love your country? Are you not interested in what happens to the place you live in?"
In the Heinlein novels, and as this system would have to emulate, military service is in fact almost discouraged by the government and the military. When the main character walks into the recruiter's office, the recruiting officer is maimed and encourages the protagonist to reconsider. After signing up, he even gets 24 hours to reconsider. And then he has the opportunity to drop out any time at basic training. There is actually intense social pressure NOT to join the military, and the logical inference is that it's encouraged by the government so as to PREVENT those who join the military out of self-interest from doing so.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
qwert wrote:Can i ask you something?What is porpose for you to open these Political topic in ConquerClub? Why you mix politic with Risk? Why you not open topic like HOT AND SEXY,or something like that.
Or perhaps the likes of those here currently residing in the ivory tower of upper academia? Say a person studying for a doctorate in history?Guiscard wrote:Can I perhaps bring up Brooksieb as a case in point as to the suitability of veterans being the only people allowed to vote
Iz Man wrote:Or perhaps the likes of those here currently residing in the ivory tower of academia?Guiscard wrote:Can I perhaps bring up Brooksieb as a case in point as to the suitability of veterans being the only people allowed to vote
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
I'm just being a snoot.Neoteny wrote:Iz Man wrote:Or perhaps the likes of those here currently residing in the ivory tower of academia?Guiscard wrote:Can I perhaps bring up Brooksieb as a case in point as to the suitability of veterans being the only people allowed to vote
The ones arguing against restricting the vote?
Iz Man wrote:I'm just being a snoot.Neoteny wrote:Iz Man wrote:Or perhaps the likes of those here currently residing in the ivory tower of academia?Guiscard wrote:Can I perhaps bring up Brooksieb as a case in point as to the suitability of veterans being the only people allowed to vote
The ones arguing against restricting the vote?
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
Iz Man wrote:Or perhaps the likes of those here currently residing in the ivory tower of upper academia? Say a person studying for a doctorate in history?Guiscard wrote:Can I perhaps bring up Brooksieb as a case in point as to the suitability of veterans being the only people allowed to vote
qwert wrote:Can i ask you something?What is porpose for you to open these Political topic in ConquerClub? Why you mix politic with Risk? Why you not open topic like HOT AND SEXY,or something like that.
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