mnottertail
Posts: 60698
Joined: 11/3/2004 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri quote:
ORIGINAL: tj444 quote:
ORIGINAL: bounty44 its a system that to my knowledge, most countries in the world that are not run by dictators have decided to follow. but to your point, yes id be happy to have all the liberals move to cuba or Sweden. "rudderless" in your response isn't appropriate---what goes on, and it goes on everywhere, which is was the point of my post, is fighting for control of the rudder. I never said anything about your American liberals moving to some other country (you make the arrogant assumption that other countries would want them).. You are stuck with them & them with you.. I wont comment about political systems in other countries but only the one I know the most about and the one i am a citizen of.. Canada does not allow its politicians to be bought like yours are.. there is a very different relationship in Canada compared to yours, in great part due to the way funding is done (the majority, about 80% is publicly funded).. private political contributions that are allowed are very small so its a hell of a lot harder to buy a politician the way y'all do it.. That is why Canadian politicians are more inclined to actually do what Canadians want, not what corporations want, the exact opposite of what happens in the US.. and why Americans are screwed no matter which party the Prez comes from.. So while y'all (wrongly) think Canadians are just like you, we are not and our political system is very, very different.. "As explained by the Supreme Court of Canada: This model is premised on the notion that individuals should have an equal opportunity to participate in the electoral process. Under this model, wealth is the main obstacle to equal participation; see C. Feasby, "Libman v. Quebec (A.G.) and the Administration of the Process of Democracy under the Charter: The Emerging Egalitarian Model" (1999), 44 McGill L.J. 5. Thus, the egalitarian model promotes an electoral process that requires the wealthy to be prevented from controlling the electoral process to the detriment of others with less economic power. The state can equalize participation in the electoral process in two ways; see O. M. Fiss, The Irony of Free Speech (1996), at p. 4. First, the State can provide a voice to those who might otherwise not be heard. The Act does so by reimbursing candidates and political parties and by providing broadcast time to political parties. Second, the State can restrict the voices which dominate the political discourse so that others may be heard as well. In Canada, electoral regulation has focussed on the latter by regulating electoral spending through comprehensive election finance provisions. These provisions seek to create a level playing field for those who wish to engage in the electoral discourse. This, in turn, enables voters to be better informed; no one voice is overwhelmed by another." http://www.elections.ca/content.aspx?section=res&dir=rep/oth/aft&document=p1&lang=e The role of money in politics is due, in large part, to too many voters being "low information" voters. How money prevents people from taking an active role in the electoral process, I'm not sure. And, how it prevents electoral discourse I, again, am not sure of. Unions buying ad space during a show doesn't prevent me from discussing anything. Voters here in the US either pay attention to the ads, accepting the message contained therein, question that message and fact-check it, or ignore those ads and do their own research. There are too many people in that first category, and not enough in the other two. An educated electorate, though, can see through the bullshit of the ads and come to their own conclusions. bullshit, period. if I control the information and the slicing of it, and I can do so with money, which I can, it is not information, see Claude Shannon for an example of this, and I warn you, heavy slogging. Way easier to say Trump is an outsider, and fuck reality, that is what this country needs (simply because it is noise in the channel, and thats what works for nutsuckers)
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Have they not divided the prey; to every man a damsel or two? Judges 5:30
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