Faul, and this is where we differ. I believe that your statement is incorrect, and to demonstrate this rather than just disagreeing with you I will present evidence to this. To quote the definition:faul wrote:Just no. That's empirically false in pretty much every way.sauin wrote: Welcome to representative democracy Faul, the only qualification is to be elected.
Representative democracy (also indirect democracy, representative republic, or psephocracy) is a type of democracy founded on the principle of elected officials representing a group of people, as opposed to direct democracy.
That's it. All that is required for representative democracy is that the person is elected, all other arguments devolve to why should that particular person be elected, for example rather than "more qualified" the argument to be made is "more familiar with the bureaucratic infrastructure" or "more experienced at dealing with foreign governments. Both of which arguments can certainly be made. However neither of these attributes make the person more "qualified" at being elected or more "qualified" to represent those who have elected them.
[/quote]faul wrote:Right, because there's nothing in the middle and safeguards against this exact inherent flaw wasn't built directly into this republic.sauin wrote:Either you accept that one of its inherent flaws is the ability to elect someone who appeals to the masses, or you can scrap the whole thing and play at being a feudal lord with the DNC superdelegates.
Ah, and now we're getting somewhere, you discussed before and conveniently dropped the notion that super-delegates are a concession against democratic principles. That is to imply some loss. So the question here is who is losing, and quite clearly, just as the 3/5ths compromise was made with no representation by the group who are being forced to make this compromise, the institution of this 1/10000th concession was made with no representation by the group who were being forced to make this concession.
Fundamentally if the argument being made is that Trump is a demagogue then clearly the "safeguards" in the republic have failed and have only served as an intellectually dishonest measure to strip power from the people. Similarly the claimed safeguards the DNC have implemented have simply stripped power from their electorate and handed it up the chain, replacing the fear of an elected demagogue with that of an effectively unelected oligarch.
This entire balancing act is shown in Arrow's impossibility theorem, the actions of the DNC constitute a weak violation of the third fairness axiom. Given the point of the theorem is to demonstrate that not all of the axioms can be simultaneously satisfied, breaking this one is most commonly associated with the adage "the only voting method that isn't flawed is a dictatorship".
This is something that is very easy to say when one doesn't have a response to an argument presented. Present your evidencefaul wrote: How noble. If I thought you didn't lack any sort of understanding of the question, I would have done the same. But that's false, and I think you do have a pretty substantial gap in knowledge between philosophy and practice, and to some extent, basic history and definitions.
The definition I am using happens to be the literal definition, everything else has its own name. If you want to argue that the process of the DNC is not a representational democracy I agree with you. If you argue that it should continue with its electoral process in the current form and with the current abuses of the charter, then I do not.Just to be clear, I am not James Madison. And you're the guy who decided his definition of democracy is IT
Once again you're mischaracterising, my statements, and once again you're missing the nuance of the definitions of these terms. You're also conflating our discussion with the one where diotama argued that the person who should be president is the person who is best qualified to lead the military.and everything else is a military junta or some dung.
Excellent, then we've already established that you're aware of these problems and how different systems that are not democracy attempt to address them by making resource tradeoffs. The US system approaches the case of pair their only existing a pair of alternatives, this ensures that no voting preference cycles can occur.If you're all about the spirit of democracy, go find some solutions to address the trillema and information asymmetry. You think it's as simple as "one person = one vote" and everything else just falls into place? Please.
In these terms, and as stated above my argument is that the DNC's approach represents an unacceptable tradeoff.
It does, the ad hominems are just for flavor.
In the context of a debate, ad hominems just show that you have no real argument.
Lastly, one flaw with the argument that the ends justifies the means, even sometimes, is that if the ends aren't achieved then all you are left with are the means. The means of the DNC have eroded the confidence of their voterbase, and at the end of the day they cannot even make the claim "At least we stopped Trump.".
A second flaw, that is also relevant here, occurs in the iterative form of the problem whereby achieving ends is necessarily pyrrhic.