Dedolito wrote:
DE: I beg to differ. You stated:
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obviously Khross wants people to vote in the way he agrees with. In his case, however, that is to vote responsibly
as the basis for defining property ownership as a common denominator.
So what exactly are you begging to differ with?
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I would also take issue with assuming that you cannot have a stake in the system without owning something. Property ownership represent only one sort of stake in the government. I'd argue simply holding a job represents a far more realistic basic common denominator in having a stake in the system.
Ok, so you take issue with it. I take issue with your position.
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[money] also can't be "readily" lucked into; that's a fairly uncommon occurance.
Not in my experience here in silicon valley where insta-millionaires based on market fluctuations, buy outs, or company stock going through the roof is a fairly common occurrence.
I'm a property owner today, not because I worked and saved for 10+ years (which we did with >10% of every paycheck going into a saving account) but because when my company got bought out I made more money overnight than we'd been able to save in all those 10+ years combined.
While fascinating, that's just Silicon Valley, and really is not generalizeable to anywhere else.
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Getting bought out reflected no ability or skill of my own, it's not something I could have worked towards. But under this proposed system, without representation all manner of federal housing laws, land use laws, labor laws, lending, bank & investment laws, etc could have been passed that would have forever kept us "chasing the dream". Without the housing bubble burst and our buy out I'm not sure that we would have ever been able to afford housing here.
So what? I didn't argue that people needed to have any skill or ability; I pointed out that Khross wants people to vote reponsibly as do I. I don't see that responsibility is something that occurs based on ability; it occurs based on incentive. When you put someone in a position where they don't need to be responsible, they **** off. When you put them in a position where they do, they either are responsible, or they aren't and then they get tossed out. Same here. I don't give a **** if someone lucks into the ability to vote for a while; if they's an irresponsible shithead they'll lose it soon enough.
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So no, there is no convincing me that property ownership, aka money, is a fair basic common denominator for the ability to retain voting privilege.
In other words, you've made up your mind ahead of time, and are arguing against positions people haven't taken.
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I would agree that our current system is replete of examples of the Have-Nots take too much from the Haves. But this proposal goes far too far in re-balancing the equation.
Why? What is "too far" and how do you know this system goes past it?
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UNLESS
You limit the federal government in ALL forms to regulating ONLY matters that directly impact property ownership. Khross has already said that these pseduo-citizens would not pay into federal taxes but hasn't defined what role the federal government would have in this brave new world. I'm sure the FFs are rolling in their graves at what the Central Government has become, but nonetheless there are still functions that a nation in the modern world needs that the FFs did not anticipate.
This paragraph makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.