DFK! wrote:
Strawman?
I don't believe pointing out something you seem to have overlooked is a strawman.
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The merits (or downfalls) of a limited voting group should not be confused with the merits (or downfalls) of legalized slavery. The two issues are entirely separate.
I don't see that they are, at least insofar as the reasons for the voting structure in 1787 is concerned.. Legalized slavery limits the voting group, but not in any way related to merit, and presumably you favor limited voting based on some sort of meritocratic basis?
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The people who wrote the Constitution, such as Madison, as an example, were against direct or total democracies because they believed it led to tyranny, not because of beliefs on slavery. Furthermore, backlash from ethno/gender/racial voting discrimination is what got us to the point where people believe in a right to vote, imo. A right that doesn't exist.
The people who wrote the Constitution were not all in favor of or against any one idea about how things ought to be, hence the number of crises and compromises during the process. Moreover, since the Constitution had to be agreed to by a lot more delegates than just those who had a major hand in actually penning it, we cannot limit consideration to their views.
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Voting should be limited, but it should be limited in a way that the obstacle to voting can be overcome by any average person, such as owning property or acquiring a basic education.
I have no objection to this idea, but that is not what the founders were limiting voting for. They were limiting voting in order to preserve the economic status quo, especially hat in the South. This was an overarching need because the country had to be kept together. If it fragmented, the states would be relatively easily gobbled up by the British or someone else.
In other words, while limited voting on some meritocratic basis has good arguments in its favor, the fact that the Founders didn't allow everyone to vote is not one of them. Aside from the fact that merit was at best a secondary motive for them, they provided a method to amend the Constitution for a reason. There is nothing inherently superior about the Constitution as originally written compared to its current state. Each change should be evalutated on its merits; the mere fact that it is a change is neither positive nor negative.