RangerDave wrote:
I posed what in a normal, real-life conversation with most people would be a pretty straight-forward question - do you think elected officials should vote based on their own judgment or based on the revealed preferences of their constituents?
Well... this is probably TL;DR, but this is why I think this thread didn't quite go as you expected:
I think the problem is that you didn't ask
just that question. The question that you just now asked is considerably more straight-forward than what you actually asked. Your titular question was an open-ended question about semantics. "What does 'representative democracy' mean to you?" Asked in a void, that's a pretty straight-forward question, even if it doesn't necessarily have a straight-forward answer. The question (again, just by itself) doesn't imply whether you think the U.S. federal system of government is a representative democracy, or whether you think representative democracy is good form of government. It just asks you what you think that term means, which is a simple enough question.
It's when we get to the poll and body of your OP that things go sideways.
The poll question, unlike the thread title question, is neither semantic nor open-ended. Instead, it's a policy question specifically framed as a binary dilemma. It's also devoid of any context. That tends to be problematic for dilemma-style questions where the audience is being asked to make a global decision between no more than two choices. Speaking for myself, I think that a public official should do whatever is
actually best. This may be what he thinks is best. It may be what his constituents think is best. It may very well be
neither. In fact, I think this is probably more often than not the case in our modern political climate.
But beyond the problems I have with the poll question as it stands alone, where I think we really run in trouble is that the poll question is
not alone. The question asked in the poll is not the same as the question asked in the title. They may or may not even be related to one another depending on how someone would answer the titular question. And beneath it all is the undercurrent that you may actually be asking our opinion about the U.S. federal system of government. This might not have a huge effect on the policy question asked by the poll, but it completely transforms the titular question into something utterly different from an open-ended semantic question. And, in the process, it just kind of quietly assumes that the federal system is, or ought to be, a "representative democracy".
To make a long story short, I think you asked at least three distinctly different questions. Which is fine if they're recognized and asked as distinct and possibly unrelated questions. But I don't think it's yet "clicked" with you (so to speak) that these even
are different questions. As I alluded in my last post, that you don't seem to see the distinction (nor, apparently, do the people you usually converse with) is interesting to me.
I think it reveals something about your own personal thought processes and internal political constructs. While interesting just for its own sake -- that is, just because you are a Glader and I like to understand how you think -- it's also interesting to me in a broader context. I'm not quite the "deconstructionist" that Khross is, but I think I might be starting to lean that way, at least when we stick to that side of it which is a practical working philosophy (i.e. phenomenology/praxeology) and ignore the, well ... existential bullshit.
More broadly speaking, then, your political constructs are interesting to me because of how and where they were constructed. The "background grid" of your political universe is a sort of touchstone, if you will, for the American education system. And, in particular, for that specific branch of tertiary education which concerns itself with the teaching of law. Why does this matter to me? The answer is simple: ask yourself which profession is
by far the most common among those who would become public officials.