Lex Luthor wrote:
So you expect elected officials to act solely in the public interest, instead of balancing the public interest with their re-election aspirations? That is incredibly unrealistic.
Obviously it's unrealistic. However, that's really an irrelevant question because the decisions that lead to this problem were not a result of any effort at balance; it was a result of almost completely ignoring public interest in favor of pleasing certain politically active elements in the short ter to ensure re-election. You might want to make sure that your question does not contain a false dilemma in the future.
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If the governmental system is designed to support politicians who lead to its failure, then the system is essentially designed to fail.
This statement is not in any way relevant.
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The blame should not be on those politicians. They are only human.
Being only human does not excuse people from failing to do their duty. As you have stated, there needs to be some balance between their desire for re-election and the public interest. However, the problem here is that there is no balance because re-election is the absolute priority for them. Asking that they subordinate it to the public interest is not the same as saying they should ignore their own interests entirely, and in any case it would be silly since they obviously think that their positions in general are in the public interest in the first place.
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You cannot expect most soldiers to rush into a battlefield where they know their deaths are certain... analogous to asking a politician to support platforms he knows will not get him re-elected.
Except for the fact that it's not analogous because death is not analogous to losing an election.
There's also the fact that soldiers generally don't get ordered into battles where all, or even most, of them are certain to die because then you're left with no soldiers and you lose the battle. In almost any battle, however, some soldiers are almost certain to die and yet they go anyhow. That's what makes them soldiers. That's their duty.
In the same vein, it is the politician's duty to do what is in the public interest. There are varying views on what is in the public interest. However, taking a course of action that is clearly not in the public interest simply because it offers the best chance of re-election is simply dereliction of duty. It is not as if avoiding some perilous course of action would necessarily result in their non-election anyhow.
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I think it is at least imaginable that a better system would not involve elections.
IT's certainly imaginable, but there is no actual evidence to support this contention.