Guys, referenda *can* be great, but imagine trying to use those to pass a yearly budget?
Has any politician ever, short of actual lynching, faced any liability for any bad policies ever? Not being voted back in is not really an accounting.So let's have 50 million Franks from down the pub instead of 4 Franks from down the pub making decisions?
Maybe. But one of the reasons that perhaps the public may be inclined to made bad decisions is because they don't have really have any accountability.
If they directly vote in the laws that fail the country, who are they going to blame then? The chances are that (assuming they don't just hand power back to elected representatives) enough of them will probably start learning to make better decisions.
That's always been the most irritating thing to me about Conservatives; "Think for yourself, don't be a sheep and listen to THEM. Be an individual and obey everything OUR talking heads tell you! THEY know better than those "experts".Ah yes, the wisdom of experts like Lauren Boebert, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Donald Trump, Jacob Rees-Mogg, and others. We can't have the fiery popular rhetoric like that that got divorce in Ireland, the $15 minimum wage in Florida, or the new constitution in Chile take hold. We have to leave things to experts like Joe Manchin, Josh Gottheimer, Tony Blair, or Keir Starmer.
You state this as a criticism of conservatives, but it equally describes the concept of "woke". "All those people believing the lies are asleep to the real world, listen to our talking heads and you'll be awake instead."That's always been the most irritating thing to me about Conservatives; "Think for yourself, don't be a sheep and listen to THEM. Be an individual and obey everything OUR talking heads tell you! THEY know better than those "experts".
If people have trouble with specific items in the budget, they can vote on them. Also, I guess what I really wanted was more direct democracy, with the end goal of being pure direct democracy. But right now I would argue we don't have an educated populace, most people don't go to college, and there are lots of people with just a high school education. I would argue that's not good enough.Guys, referenda *can* be great, but imagine trying to use those to pass a yearly budget?
If you vote bad shit too much, your nation could face hard times, or cease to exist. If you vote for a very small military, and diplomacy/state department budget, the nation you are living in dies. Vote for bad laws, guess who has to live with them. Vote for your ingroup against the outgroup, good luck attracting immigrants to your country. Troll voting means you will face the consequences.Yeah-- you (like us in the UK) have unrepresentative representatives.
As opposed to what-- the wisdom of experts like Frank from down the pub?
It's quite easy to pull shitty examples of the system failing to serve the country well. It's easy to do that for direct democracy, too; let's not forget the people of the UK choosing decisively to keep First Past the Post. Direct democracy would have the UK implementing sweeping restrictions to the right to protest, increased police brutality, and (a few short years ago) the death penalty, in all likelihood.
Likewise, it's easy enough to bring examples forward of the system serving the country better than its alternative. Representative democracy expanded the NHS from a local experimental system in South Wales to national service. We wouldn't have it under direct democracy.
Damn right.You state this as a criticism of conservatives
It ain't the "woke" crowd telling me to take dewormers and accusing me of being in league with Satan and communists for getting the vaccine, homeboy.but it equally describes the concept of "woke". "All those people believing the lies are asleep to the real world, listen to our talking heads and you'll be awake instead."
Really ?If people have trouble with specific items in the budget, they can vote on them.
My guy, I barely have my budget under control, and micro economics doesn't translate to macro economics. Our civilization is at the point where you can't just be generally good at it, you need specialists. That includes bureaucracy.If people have trouble with specific items in the budget, they can vote on them. Also, I guess what I really wanted was more direct democracy, with the end goal of being pure direct democracy. But right now I would argue we don't have an educated populace, most people don't go to college, and there are lots of people with just a high school education. I would argue that's not good enough.
Broadly, politicians that create bad policy suffer the same fate as anyone else who screws up their job: they lose that job. Sometimes immediately via getting sacked or resigning from certain elevated duties such as ministerial posts, and sometimes by being voted out of office entirely. Also just like happens in other professions, sometime they screw up and keep their job: we would have to accept that politicians, because of the somewhat unique nature of politics (e.g. safe seats), can be unusually good at keeping their jobs after they screw up compared to most professions.Has any politician ever, short of actual lynching, faced any liability for any bad policies ever? Not being voted back in is not really an accounting.
Nobody is doing that.It ain't the "woke" crowd telling me to take dewormers and accusing me of being in league with Satan and communists for getting the vaccine, homeboy.
We wouldn't have the NHS. Absolutely.This is the kind of absolutism that I take issue with. Wouldn't? There are plenty of progressive reforms done through direct democracy, so that's a load of shit.
That extra step has at least prevented some of the worst excesses. We would be refusing refugee settlement (given that the UK population is convinced immigration is many times higher than it is, and also conflates immigration with refugee status). We would be flouting international law, because the population is broadly chauvinist and doesn't give a shit about international law or forward-planning. Our supply chains would utterly have collapsed because people have zero appreciation of the detail or minutiae of that side of things.Equally representative democracy but with one more step. And a whole host of other problems.
And also means everyone who didn't vote for those measures suffers, too. To life and death proportions, on a mass scale.If you vote bad shit too much, your nation could face hard times, or cease to exist. If you vote for a very small military, and diplomacy/state department budget, the nation you are living in dies. Vote for bad laws, guess who has to live with them. Vote for your ingroup against the outgroup, good luck attracting immigrants to your country. Troll voting means you will face the consequences.
On one hand, you're happy to signal boost idiots to make yourself look better.
How am I signal boosting idiots seeing as they aren't identified?On one hand, you're happy to signal boost idiots to make yourself look better.
On the other hand, you didn't even actually succeed at finding something that correlates to what was said.
"I identify as a conservative, and I must be a good guy; therefore, conservatives can't ever do anything not good. If that ever were to (impossibly) happen, either that bad thing must really be good or the people who did it aren't really conservatives."How am I signal boosting idiots seeing as they aren't identified?
And are you really going to fucking pretend that conservative brainrotted worms aren't saying that the vaccine is communism and satan and a whole bunch of other bullshit? Wake the fuck up.
Have you considered that the complex of corporate media interests that encourage those opinions could be weakened or smashed by democratic vote as well? The very same people that set the news agenda in its right-wing frame pull the strings of your supposedly salvatory representatives.That extra step has at least prevented some of the worst excesses.