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by manigandham 2725 days ago
The government is the people. At some point, the officials need to just get on with it.

The reality is fine-grained democratic voting on every issue does not scale to today's world. People do not have the time, attention, education and understanding to vote properly on everything, and when you add in personal biases, lack of risk management, short-term outlooks, majority power, and special interests; things break down completely.

Many of these things which could improve civic life do not really need a voting process. It's not a system for the people (not anymore) but stays around because it removes accountability and provides regulatory capture for the few who profit. Of course, as you say, the very people who do not take action are the ones that need to take action for this to get better. I do not have an answer for that.

1 comments

> The reality is fine-grained democratic voting on every issue does not scale to today's world.

Tell it to Switzerland. The most recent referendum included such important issues as "should the government offer subsidies to farmers who leave the horns on their cows".

Having lived in Switzerland a while, direct democracy may not be perfect but it definitely works. It might not work in America but it works.

I don't follow. The fact that such an issue was voted on is not evidence that it should be voted on by the whole population. How many really care or know about that situation? Why do you say that "it works"? In what way exactly?

Switzerland is also around 8M people which is smaller than some cities in bigger countries so it barely qualifies for the scale argument.