rotting bones wrote: ↑Tue Dec 29, 2020 9:49 pm
zompist wrote: ↑Tue Dec 29, 2020 9:44 pm
No, because I'm not interested in batting away criticisms like pesky flies. I would concentrate on quantification. How many people die because of such-and-such a system? When you have numbers, you can compare the systems. This is exactly what we do with e.g. Covid deaths. In that case, the difference is pretty spectacular. "All systems have the same problems in the same degree" does not generally turn out to be true.
Better yet, if there are excess deaths, you could find out what causes them and work on that.
What would be perfectly useless is deciding that "deaths happen in any system, therefore my system is not responsible for looking at deaths." But that's your approach to criticisms of your voting system.
Okay, so are you arguing that decentralized socialism is less prone to being gamed than democratic socialism?
I am arguing that your system has flaws that you could address. I don't get why this is hard to understand. If you were writing a computer program, and someone said it had errors in it, would you think it's a useful response to point out that other people's programs have errors too? Why not... fix the errors?
It comes across as you wanting to play an endless game of gotcha. It's tiring.
Look, if I present a political proposal, you are welcome to point out flaws. I will not come back and say "But back in December 2020 you made a proposal with flaws in it." This comparing systems business is a defense mechanism so you can avoid thinking you are wrong in any way.
zompist wrote: ↑Tue Dec 29, 2020 9:44 pm
Why not spend some time thinking of how to address those problems? Concentrate on one problem to start with-- ecological externalities. Can you modify your voting system so that people are
less encouraged to vote for things that destroy the ecosphere? Without resorting to CAPITALISM BAD?
Do you understand that I don't want to because that would be undemocratic?
Seriously? Your plan is for humanity to go extinct. This isn't making your proposal sound better.
Maybe you aspire to be a lone genius who proves all science wrong, but come on. There are studies of democracy. There are studies of voting systems. There are studies of plebiscite systems. I shouldn't have to explain that there are things like constitutions, there are examples of democratic systems making bad choices, there are better and worse voting systems.
At some point a few pages ago we were talking about incentives. You seemed to understand the concept then, at least when you could criticize the incentive system offered to capitalists. Now you've created a system that incentivizes bad behavior and you don't care. You're not defending "democracy", you're defending a poorly designed system that you made up
and which you could improve instead of trying to stifle criticism.