Dedolito wrote:
1. Are you or are you not saying that property ownership, aka money, is the stake in the system that would ostensibly invoke the desired characteristic of responsible voting?
No. I've said at least twice now that property or buisness ownership or military service will provide
incentive to vote responsibly; i.e. with due consideration to the issues at hand and not just "how can I get the most money". Whether it "invokes the desired characteristic" varies from person to person. No system is perfect; there will be irresponsible voters in any system. "Lack of perfection" is hardly a valid cricticism.
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2. Are you or are you not saying that without property ownership, aka money, that members in society do not have anything else that would be at stake if they do not have the privilege to vote?
Since military service was another means to gain the vote I think it's obvious even to an untrained observer that I am not saying that.
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So blanket rules would be applied to situations where the system would be patently broken, tough $#!*?
Since the system wouldn't be "broken" by Silicon Valley, no, and I don't know of any other situation where it would. I can only make it so clear that
I don't give a **** how you got rich. I only care that you take some action with that moeny that invests you in the national system.
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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..
au contraire:
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Everyone has a choice of whether or not they want the privilege and responsibility to vote in my system. You see, voting is not a right; it never has been. You have to earn it. You have to earn your say in government.
The ability to earn money is the end all and be all of this voting system. Without that ability one will never meet the property ownership criteria. Yes there is the military service route. Commendable, but insufficient IMO.
While I'm sure you think that "Au contraire" somehow makes it appear that you've found a flaw, it does not.
A) The ability to earn money is something even people with fairly severe retardation have. It is not the "end all and be all of the voting sytem". In fact, it really is only peripheral to it. One really does not need to earn any excessive amount of money to own property or a buisness. This complaint is really not about the ability to earn money but the fact that people who are to vote need ot earn a certain
amount of money. Well, duh. Property is worth money. Buisnesses are worth money. People in the military earn money.
B) As you pointed out there is military service. The fact that it's insufficient "in your opinion" is irrelevant. A system does not have to meet your personal liking to be viable.
C) Who gives a **** if "the ability to earn money"
is the be-all and end-all? It's not an automatically invalid criteria as an
a priori. Explain why it shouldn't be a criteria.
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Not with the arguments presented thus far, which still base participation on money.
Again, duh. Obviously money is a factor.
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Am I the only one that paid attention in history class? Systems that base participation on wealth have failed time and time again.
Time and again, huh? Do tell.
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Rome fell too, which is the closest example I am aware of to Khross's proposed system.
That's nice. Perhaps you could explain how Rome's system is similar and how it cause he fall? Otherwise you just have a
cum hoc ergo propter hoc argument
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You could argue that the America that the FFs created has already died, the final nail being driven back when State Militias were dissolved in the early 20th century and that we modern citizens only inhabit the bloated corpse of the failed Experiment, but I digress.
Yes you do digress because there is no reason that we should necessarily have the same America the Founding Fathers created (appeal to tradition) and you engage in predjudicial language to support that.
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What is "too far" and how do you know this system goes past it?
Too far is a system that basis participation on wealth.
Circular argument.
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That part do you not understand? Under the proposed system those with money can vote on matters that will directly affect the disenfranchised. Labor laws, banking laws, investment laws, property laws, personal liberties, public health & safety (FDA, CDC, USDA, et al), etc. Unless, as I said, you remove all such venues from the purview of the federal government and return them back to the States where these non-federal citizens will be still be able to participate in their self-destiny.
You're arguing that the system won't work unless it defeats its own purpose. The idea is that those citizens without a stake in the system
shouldn't be able to vote on those matters. You don't seem to get it. The whole purpose of this system is to avoid each person having a say, and really, it isn't "those with money" it's "those with property, buisness, or military sevice". "Those with money" is just a cute way of saying "Those with money of an arbitrary amount I can't quantify but I assume people must have because I'm ignoring how the system actually works in favor of my own preconceived ideas".
As for "their self-destiny", that's a red herring. There is no "self destiny". It's the destiny of the society as a whole they are participating in, and there is no reason everyone should have a say in that unless they meet some minimum qualifier of participating in making it a success.