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#1 |
Fleet Admiral
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The idea of democracy only involves the concept of choice, it does not address whether those choices are any good.
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abusus non tollit usum - A right should NOT be withheld from people on the basis that some tend to abuse that right. |
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#2 |
Silent Hunter
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SPD. It's clearly a caricature of Jimbuna.
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#3 |
Navy Seal
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If you don't like the choices; be the alternative or stay quiet.
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#4 |
Fleet Admiral
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If you are not part of the solution, you are part of the precipitate?
Or something like that, ![]()
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abusus non tollit usum - A right should NOT be withheld from people on the basis that some tend to abuse that right. |
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#5 |
Soaring
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If you took any of the choices and see them doing what you should have known they would do, don't criticise them then. You enabled them to powers to do what they do.
If you legitimise the system, you have given up the legitimacy to criticise it if it just does what you had to expect it would do. You are an accomplice, then. And if you expected it to do something else, than you cannot be helped, and maybe you should not legitimise it. EVERYbody today could and should know what to expect of politicians. Interesting demoscopic finding first published around two weeks ago: the structure of non-voters has changed, and now include more private businessmen and more self-employed members of the middle class then ever before. Reasons given: a growing disillusionising about lacking abilities and freedoms of politics to act on behalf of the people. A growing number of people think poltiicians do not act on their behalf, but in explicit violation of people'S will (which is fact, btw.). A general feeling of uneasiness about the political going is wide-spread and growing and includes practically all social classes, but the educated middle class and the independent small business class grow faster in size than the other groups. Before the elections started, demoscopes expected the highest number of non-voters ever. It has constantly grown over the past elections. People learn. Slowly, but they do.
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. |
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#6 |
Navy Seal
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So why not be the alternative?
If no one is voting because they don't like the choice, then stand up and be an alternative choice. If you are right in what you say about the will of the country, then you will be successful. Or alternatively, just complain about it here and do nothing.
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#7 | |
Soaring
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![]() Quote:
but what you really want is that we just submit to the system itself, becoming just another party amongst several, following the system mechanisms and keeping it alive that way. But right that is the very problem. In the assessement of people like me the system itself is the problem, and thus cannot generate any solutions anymore. You cannot revolutionise the system from within. It is designed to prevent exactly that - because the lobbying parties constituting it wants to stay in control. But people like me do not want that. We want it being destroyed alltogether, because we have understood that it is not forming solutions for our survival in the future, but is helping in preventing that. As a matter of fact in the past years we see a tendency for a raise in local "Bürgerinitiativen" (grasroot movements, civil rights movements) here in Germany, and soemtimes these have been powerful enough to break through the blockade of regional government, economy lobbies and parties. I have been engaged in one such movement myself, as I have explained in the past. I do not want another party. I want civil disobedience on a scale that deadlocks the state and chases the established party system away, breaking up the destructive alliance between policy and economy. I want this on an international level, since a change in just one country means nothing, and cannot survive anyhow. The whole world order we have allowed to form up is against the future of man. That may sound pathetic, but unfortunately nothing less than this is true. You think this view of things is capable of winning a majority? ![]() The will of the country, you said. Well, obviously the will of the country still is such that it keeps the existing system alive, although the number of non-voters has reached a new record-high. This keeping-the-system is the problem. Obviously "will of the majority" and "being right" are not the same (one of the big mistakes in democratic thinking). Maybe that's why they say that numerical majorities are just numerical majorities - no statements about who is right and who is wrong. many socieites in the past have broken down with a majority of the population tolerating the processes leading to these falls for too long, until it was too late. I have just finished a second comprehensive reading ijn just some weeks about right this phenomenon, so don't try me, or I ripple-fire a whole list of failed socieites with stunning parallels to the modern present. Have these people of the past been right, just because they formed majorities "majorities"? Obviously not. Many saw their societies desintegrating in social rebellion, civil war and cannibalism, because the dissent led to rebellion to suicidal structures and processes just too late. Historic parallels to the events unfolding in the present count by the dozens, from the drama of the Pitcairn Island over the Anazasi and the Easter Islanders and the Maya to the Vikings . We could learn from these warning examples, if only we would want to. But, like you, the majority prefers to unknowingly repeat the very same mistakes many other people before us have fallen for in the past 1000 years, and probably also before these 1000 years. And finally, many germans say that much of what the CDU does is more SPD-like than the SPD, and that the SPD has become greener than the Grteens, and some aspects of Green policies have become more conservative than the CDU. The last four years of grand coaltition did not help to keep the alternatives more ovbviously separate. there is no sense in having the choice if the difference between alternatives to chose from disappears. It seems the CDU has won and will be able to form a coalition with the FDP. But they will face the same finacial misery like any other possible government, anf they will face the same prblems and will be hit by the same counterproductive variable. I tell you: the changes there will be, will be cosmetic only. the basic problems remain. The basic way of dealing with them will remain the same. And in four years the number of non-voters will have grown again. Maybe hsitory will not remeber them as great geroes. But their decision not to vote will make sure they have become a little bit less guilty, than others - than that majority of yours, for example.
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. |
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#8 | |
Navy Seal
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Of course you can.
There is no limit on the ability of a majority government to change the system. All constitutions can, and have, been changed or scrapped. Certainly not. It would take a mass outbreak of stupidity before a majority voted for any of your ideas. Quote:
individuals and oligarchs. You don't need me to give examples! That aside, it's not about if the majority are right or wrong, it's about the majority being free to chose or be an alternative. As opposed to being opressed under the will of the few or an individual.
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#9 | |
Ace of the Deep
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![]() ![]() ![]() I couldn't find a clapping one. Doesn't really matter. What matters is that Sky or me for that matter aren't anarchist, that is, we both (at least me) see society as a lawful one, where everyone is equal before the law and no-one is in any regard above it. The problem is that corruption has been around since the dawn of time and ever a true government by/of/for the people couldn't get rid of this, as individuals who seek power above anything else usually find willing accomplices in people who surround them or are "in power". I would listen to Sky if I were anyone. His thinking and that of others might just save us from our destructive selves. |
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#10 | |||
Silent Hunter
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As the old military axiom goes: "Amateurs study tactics. Professionals study logistics." The sheer logistics of some kind of worldwide revolution of thought concerning the proper course of action for the "future of man" are so mind-boggling that they might as well be impossible. There is only one force that transcends virtually all national/cultural/and political boundaries on a daily basis by virtue of its' very nature. Can you guess what it is? ![]() For those who don't know, it is capitalism; the exchange of goods and services with a real or perceived (caveat emptor) mutual benefit to all parties involved. Given this, in addition to your continual prophesizing of environmental and social catastrophe, I would think that the most efficient and successful course for the "future of man" would be readily apparent. The nations that achieve the best ratios of pollution to prosperity to birth rate are all the ones that have had relatively lassiez-faire capitalist systems in place the longest. Those same nations are the ones that continually embrace newer, cleaner, more efficient technologies, even in the absence of state compulsion. Negative birth rates coupled with more highly advanced industry is a recipe for the success of mankind. Even better, such developed nations attract immigrants from poorer nations, who then, through capitalism, eventually lift themselves out of poverty and also demonstrate lower birth rates. Furthermore, such nations eventually break the economic backs and political systems of centralist nations through economic competition, leading to more, beneficial, capitalist reform. All that is needed is a limited government that cannot easily form plutocratic structures but is given the power to punish fraud. I realize that you think the planet is running out of time, and that the "slow" nature of this kind of reform (assuming you see it as feasible) may be too slow; but consider just how quickly lightly-reined capitalism has changed the fate of nations. If Deng Xiaoping or Adam Smith or Milton Friedman are not evidence enough of the success of the economically free nation, then you surely must be aware of the significance of the Wirtschaftswunder and Ludwig Erhard. That one man is principally responsible for affording Germany the luxury of contemplating the implication of far-reaching socioeconomic policy, and the reason that some there have the luxury of having trillions of dollars(US) to spend on failed socialist initiatives. Perhaps you continue to disagree Sky, but your apparent disdain for the limited choices amongst government indicates to me that you should not. If the state has little power to introduce new and usually harmful legislation, there is little reason to be concerned with which particular party holds the majority in a democratic system. If individual freedoms are prized even above the rule of the majority, there is little reason to fear the loss of freedom or the pursut of destructive policies. There is only the truth of the market. Supply and demand. The market will force us to ultimately adapt a sustainable system, or go from one unsustainable system to another until a sustainable one is found. Until you can show me, or even yourself, a suitable system that offers more benefits, I cannot understand why you are unwilling to adopt some version of lassiez-faire capitalism. Quote:
My apologies for intruding on your discussion with Letum, but I do enjoy getting your perspective, even if you haven't convinced me yet.
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#11 |
Chief of the Boat
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Hey!!...I resemble that remark!!
![]() Looking at that sheep I'm bloody glad you made no reference to Grune ![]() |
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#12 |
Captain
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Given how close both sides are to each other, voting this time really makes a difference.
On the other hand, this campaign has certainly been one of the most boring I've ever seen. The parties really seemed like they don't care. They just complain afterwards when people don't cast their vote and say it is hurting democracy. And SPD ain't jimbuna - too slim, too much hair ![]() |
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#13 |
Eternal Patrol
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God help me but, for once I agree with Letum.
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#14 |
Stowaway
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Yes they lost their fleece alright...again. Merkel is the fleecer, and she might bring the extreme right wing to help her in fleecing the German people.
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