|
|
|
|
|
by dragonwriter
4499 days ago
|
|
> And more importantly, are elections the best we can do? I would say elections are almost certainly an essential element of the best we can do; elections alone aren't a complete system of government. > Handing over nearly unlimited power to a group of people we hope will not use it unwisely in the next few years? Elections don't imply that. It sounds to me like your problem isn't actually with elections at all, but with the details of the powers given to officials who are elected. |
|
A bit of both. Elected officials have way too much power, and not enough ways to control them. Look for instance what it takes to revoke someone. But the way election themselves work suck too: by nature, elections will mostly select a narrow elite, which right now is mostly hereditary. And when we vote, we can hardly judge the wannabe official on his discourse: many are lying to gain the favour of the people.
If you get only one thing, get this: policy making shouldn't be in the hands of a few policy makers. The people should vote their own laws directly. The people should even write their laws directly, though I don't know how to do that technically (with computers networked together, we should find a way).