| > What has the public done to you to deserve this? Well, what they did was force me into temporary slavery. > It's like working at a restaurant and spitting in customers' food If the customers were forcing me to work in a restaurant, I think I might do that. > If you're unhappy about being forced into duty, you can abstain from voting at all Why would I do that, when a much more effective method of screwing over the people who forced me into this, is by voting for bad policy? The people who would force me into this want good policy. So I do the opposite of what they want. This is why you don't do stuff like this. Because the people who you are forcing into slavery aren't going to play "nice" with your plan. They will instead take actions that you don't like, regardless of your complaints about it, or regardless how "immoral" you believe it to be. I do not have to live by your code of ethics. I will instead live by mine, and screw over your plan in the way that hurts everyone the most. You don't get to complain about "fairness" or the "right" way for me to protest, when you are forcing me into slavery. I would engage in this behavior specially because it would very effectively sabotage this plan to force people into the work. |
> You don't get to complain about "fairness" or the "right" way for me to protest, when you are forcing me into slavery.
What about the part of the public who doesn't like this system, doesn't want to force you to do anything, and would like to change the way it works? If you're "sabotaging" the system by voting for "bad policies," you're screwing them over along with everyone else. Can they complain? Because I can guarantee you that they will.
Anyway. Let me put it this way: if 95% of the public supports this system, it doesn't matter how hard you try to sabotage it. It won't do dick. If a significant percentage hates the system, let's say 20%, then 20% of the "enslaved" representatives really want to change the system to work on a voluntary basis. Surely they can bloody negotiate with the remaining 80% to enact a reform, instead of lashing out against the public at large, who can't really do anything about the system because they weren't picked by the lottery.