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There was a recent national election here and a rather unpopular political party won a majority government in the legislature. This phenomenon is largely caused by vote splitting and low voter turnouts. It is a common phenomenon which many have attempted to solve with alternative electoral systems.
A
proportional representation system attempts to solve this, but seats are distributed to only the parties voted for. This solves the vote splitting problem, but not the low voter turnouts. To remedy this problem a new system of proportional representation should allot seats to apathetic representatives.
A typical election under this system for a house with three-hundred seats may have a voter turnout of fifty percent. As a result half of the seats would be given to apathetic representatives, and the rest to the parties as a proportion of their vote.
It has become evident that I've only thought this far along into the idea, and haven't decided the best way to select apathetic representatives from a pool. Until such a mechanism has been decided each of the seats will be occupied by a jar of bees with a loose fitting lid.
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Annotation:
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Wasps would be a better choice than bees. |
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What do the AR's do? Continually abstain? |
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Mostly abstain, but also be contrarians that refuse to let things pass, just because why do anything? |
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So you end up with all these grunting, aggressive primates,
scratching themselves, crapping everwhere, and stuffing their
faces at the taxpayer's expense. |
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It would be cruel to the gorillas to place them in an environment
like that. |
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//It would be cruel to the gorillas to place them in an
environment like that.// |
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Since when did the Borg do humour? Not bad, though. |
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By the way, nobody has voted for or agin this idea, aptly. |
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//What do the AR's do?// Perhaps fail to show up, thereby
preventing a quorum. |
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Apathetic representatives could be selected by
lottery,by picking from among those lottery-winners
now rich enough to afford an election run. You would
just have to force the ones that don't want to do
this to run for office. |
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Why force them to run for election? Simply force lottery
winners to become MPs, congressmen, etc. If only people
not
busy otherwise earning a living have time to serve in the
legislature, then the legislature becomes a bit
unrepresentative. A solution is to make randomly
selected people rich for life, and force them in exchange
to do the hard jobs from which, notoriously, any applicant
is, ipso facto, disqualified. The lottery aspect makes the
scheme pay for itself. This could either be opt-in
(only those who buy lottery tickets contribute and are
eligible to win) or
universal, via the Inland Revenue or IRS which would make
it like
National Service, but better remunerated. |
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Pshaw! How can you be certain they are apathetic until you get
at least one form letter back praising their VILE position in
response to your sharply worded, yet respectful letter? |
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I take it you haven't collected many of those yet. |
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I like this idea, but I won't vote on it. |
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How appropriate, though. A half-thought-out idea about half-interested politicians representing the half of the electorate that doesn't give half a rat's patootie! |
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You wouldn't have to force anyone to run for office. Just
call people randomly and ask them whether they want to
do it or not. Anybody who immediately says yes or no is
rejected. Those who respond with "I dunno, maybe",
"Uh, I guess so?" or even simply "Meh" are selected for an
extensive background check to search for any past
evidence of having ever had a point of view about
anything that matters. Factors such as a prior run for
political office, having voluntarily performed community
service, or having written a letter to the editor are all
taken into account when deciding whether or not the
"candidate" truly could not give less of a shit one way or
the other. |
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From what I can tell our votes buy us nothing more than the right to complain about the bastards broken campaign promises anyway. |
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Voting for individuals is a monumental con job, (heavy on the mental). Binding referendums and an earned right to vote would get people off their asses. Choosing the next puppet seems to change nothing for the better. |
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//an extensive background check to search for any
past evidence of having ever had a point of view
about anything that matters.// It's called voir dire. |
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// //What do the AR's do?// Perhaps fail to show up, thereby preventing a quorum.// |
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Or you could make it a point that the AR's don't get paid unless they show up for work, unlike the MP's we usually end up with. |
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