Asking for one specific way when there are myriads is pointless, and that's not what an informational survey is for. Quit salivating.
You have to forgive me for a little bit of excitement; this is the first (and only) hint of detail we've had so far on how the complete restructuring of global society would actually work, other than "government bad, power to the people".
Well, it
looked like it was going to be that hint of detail, anyway.
Actually it functions around fully open citizen's councils at the local level.
The Charter of the Social Contract for Rojava explicitly states that authority is "exercised by governing councils elected by popular vote". There is also a specific hierarchy of political institutions, with the Legislative Assembly at the top, which is comprised of elected representatives.
Ah yes, the goalpost has been moved.
That's odd, because I could have sworn I'd already stated before that it wouldn't be functional
beyond the scale of a small town. And before that, quite frequently talking about entire countries.
That's a very very big assumption you're making, and a wrong one. I have never heard of anybody who has won an election get training on anything related to their job except maybe a review of the rules of order.
You've never heard of it? It was already pointed out earlier in this thread that newly elected members of the Cuban National Assembly, which Seanchaidh pointed to, are provided with training.
So my question is, if people picked off the street are at least equally as effective at governing as career politicians, then there's no reason to believe that the sample size of people governing would meaningfully effect the quality of the decisions being made. After all, 100 senators are just as good as 435 representatives, is as good as 650 seats in commons, is as good as 12000 members of a nation. By the logic of statistics, expanding this out further should yield nothing interesting in emergent results, correct?
Not axiomatically correct, no, but we can accept it for now, for the sake of argument.
Firstly, the independent candidates for the Chilean and Cuban constitutional bodies were not "people picked off the street". In order to run in the first place, they would necessarily be people with a strong interest in governance. You could not drag some disinterested bloke from the mall, hand him the authority, and expect equivalent results.
Secondly, elected representatives are people who are expected to become well versed in how government and policy implementation work, the costs and resources etc. Electing them does not "magically" do this. But it is part of the job that they develop that knowledge. To do so, they will be given access to the networks of the civil service, research bodies, etc.
Obviously, we all know that an enormous number of elected representatives either 1) fail to develop their knowledge, or 2) Place self-interest over the interests of those who elected them. This is an enormous, gaping flaw in the system that requires safeguards, transparency, and accountability to fix. Direct democracy would not be a salve for this problem, but would exacerbate it: it would remove
any onus at all to develop knowledge or act in the interest in others; and it would render transparency and accountability impossible.
So, you would have a central government... comprised of people with no greater authority than anybody else?
In what sense is that a central government, then?
And we're back to thinking people are stupid. Apparently too stupid to ask someone in the know. We're ignoring fact finding missions, we're ignoring that news still exists, we're ignoring a lot so you can be perpetually salty. Who hurt you as a child? Why are you like this?
Oh, the news will save us from ignorance! Jesus wept.
Nobody hurt me. I simply don't live in the perpetual happy fun-time land necessary to believe that everyone is inherently sweet and good-natured and wise. We've had thousands of years of human history to put paid to that idea.