Xequecal wrote:
You elect people who will discriminate against the disenfranchised. They have no say in who gets elected, so this is easy.
Not at all, considering the bar to enfranchisement is attainable by anyone. Futhermore, you haven't established the underlying assumption here: that the enfranchised are in the majority.
Xeq wrote:
If this violates the nation's Constitution, you elect people who will change it, or hold a convention to change it, whatever the process is. Even if you structure the system to resist this, like say letting everyone vote on constitutional amendments, it's still pretty damned easy to attack from the side if your target can't vote.
Except, again, if your system is constructed to be difficult to change and the bar to enfranchisement is able to be overcome by anyone, and the appropriate checks on power are in place, this is wholly unlikely.
Xeq wrote:
Our current federal government's unparalleled mastery of massively violating the spirit of the Constitution while upholding the letter (the health care bill is a great example) should give you some idea on what is possible.
Except that the current federal government doesn't fit any of my criteria. In fact, it's a perfect example of an evolution from a system similar to one I describe to one advocated by the more "liberal" in society:
1) It does not have limited suffrage
2) It has a broad and virtually unlimited central government
3) It has no real check on the central government, nor representation of lesser [read: more localized, such as state-level] entities.
Xeq wrote:
The ways are endless. Elect an executive who will appoint rubber-stamp judges to the Supreme Court.
Unless we used the non-modern method and viewpoint of the executive: existing solely to represent the states to one another and to outside powers, and therefore elected
by the statesXeq wrote:
Get around Constitutional protections by not giving force of law of unconstitutional provisions, instead just levy a huge tax on anyone who doesn't "choose" to comply.
Which required an amendment to the constitution after qualifications for voting (beyond those that shouldn't have existed in the first place) were largely removed. Thus also not proving your point.
Xeq wrote:
Change military recruiting or education standards so no one can pass the bar on citizenship.
Notice how I said I'm not in favor of the military being the requirement? Education that isn't a government monopoly removes that concern as well, as the market would push against what you're talking about.
Xeq wrote:
How evil do you want to get? You could pay a neighboring country to come bomb your own disenfranchised dissidents and order your military to ignore them.
Or, before you go into la-la land, you could deal with that fact that nothing you've stated supports your position concretely.
Edit: Look, I'm not trying to be snarky, but in order to demonstrate your position that a limited voting bloc under a democratic republic leads to the harms you're talking about, you need to actually cite instances at least similar. All you've done so far is cite situations under which the voting public was either 1) not limited at all or 2) not limited on grounds which they could overcome (such as gender or race).