Stathol wrote:
Beryllin:
Instinctively, I understand your opposition to the idea. I actually share some of those same instincts. However, you're looking at the issue in a void, and I think that's part of the problem. The issue at hand is specifically suffrage with respect to the federal legislative body. State and local representation is something completely separate from this. Here's why that matters:
To the best of my knowledge, both Rynar and Khross support a far more limited form of federal government than our present system. It would have very strict limits to its power. In most respects, it should have less power than the state and local governments. The difference between its current power and its proposed power should be divested (as was originally intended) as powers of the states or the people.
So, yes; some people will lose interest (in the financial sense) in the federal legislature, the refund of power by the federal government to the states/people (in which they are still interested) will still result in a net gain in representation and real political power in absolute terms.
As for abuses by the interested against the non-interested, this is a real concern. However, I think this is best settled by checks and balances against the federal government. They can only commit such abuses as they have the power to commit. Solution: don't give them much power. Have tight, specific controls on the powers of the federal government, and make those controls subject to the people. I.e., require ratification by the states for constitutional amendments. Our current system requires 3/4 ratification; I'd contemplate the idea of increasing this to unanimous ratification.
Believe it or not, I really do understand this. I really do. But I still stand on the principle: People who can enact laws and tell people who have no say in the enactment of that law that they must obey that law, are by definition dictators. I don't care if we have 275 million dictators and 25 million people being dictated to, or 299 million dictators and 1 million people being dictated to. I don't care how benevolent the dictators think they'd be, or what limits they'd want to place on the exercise of power. The fact will remain, always, that some will have power over others, and power corrupts.
My principle will always be, messy though it is: Everyone votes, or your (general "you" here and following, not specific you) law should have no power over those denied the ability to vote; don't dictate to me that I have to obey your law, you can stuff your law so far up your anus that it'll twinkle at you when you brush your teeth. *shrug*
My last word. No argument is ever going to cause me to deviate from that principle.