[EM] the "meaning" of a vote (or lack thereof)
Dave Ketchum
davek at clarityconnect.com
Wed Aug 24 13:43:44 PDT 2011
A SAD weakness about what is being said.
On Aug 24, 2011, at 12:55 PM, Fred Gohlke wrote:
> Michael Allan wrote:
> "But not for voting. The voting system guarantees that my vote
> will have no effect and I would look rather foolish to suppose
> otherwise. This presents a serious problem. Do you agree?"
TRULY, this demonstrates lack of understanding of cause and effect.
IF the flask capacity is 32 oz then pouring in 1 oz will:
. Do nothing above filling if the flask starts with less than 31 oz.
. Cause overflow if flask already full.
In voting there is often a limit at which time one more would have an
effect. If the act were pouring sodas into the Atlantic the limit
would be far away.
>
> To which Warren Smith responded:
> "--no. A single ballot can change the outcome of an election.
> This is true in any election method which is capable of having
> at least two outcomes."
>
> Proof: simply change ballots one by one until the outcome
> changes. At the moment it changes, that single ballot
> changed an election outcome. QED.
BUT there could be many previous ballots of which none made any change.
>
>
> Since, as stated, "A single ballot can change the outcome of an
> election." and "This is true in any election method which is capable
> of having at least two outcomes.", why would a voter prefer a new
> electoral method over the existing plurality method?
>
> From the voter's perspective, (s)he is already familiar with
> plurality, so , if the new method produces the same result, why
> change?
Truly no reason PROVIDED the new method provides the same result,
given the same input.
>
> Cui bono? Obviously, not the voter.
>
> When considering the 'meaning' of a vote, it is more important to
> examine the question of what the voter is voting for or against.
> Voting, of the type used in plurality contests, is profoundly
> undemocratic, not because of the vote-counting method, but because
> the people can only vote for or against candidates and issues chosen
> by those who control the political parties - the people Robert
> Michels' described as oligarchs.
>
> If the object of changing the electoral method is to build a more
> just and democratic government, the proposed methods must give the
> people a way to influence the choice of candidates and the issues on
> which they vote.
>
> Fred Gohlke
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