[EM] Could we work on enactment-feasibility instead of jealous, self-serving infighting?
Michael Ossipoff
email9648742 at gmail.com
Mon May 7 00:40:12 PDT 2012
I'm going to first quote the last sentence in Richard's post:
"And remember that we are on the same side of the fence (trying to oppose
the existing plurality method)."
[endquote]
Is that right. Richard could have fooled me :-)
But yes, I'd thought that was the idea. But then, if so, why doesn't Richard
have anything
better to do than attack another proposal, or try to publish an attack
article
about Approval, and its problems?
Is Richard going to tell us here, at EM, what Approval's problems are,
before he
publishes his article about them?
My Approval article was primarily about Approval. The benefits that it can
bring, and
will bring if enacted.
Though I mentioned other methods, it was only to highlight certain Approval
advantages.
In contrast, Richard wants to publish an article devoted entirely to
attacking or attempting
To criticize, another method, regarded by him as a rival.
That jealous, self-serving, infighting mentality is regrettable. I suggest
that, instead, Richard publish an article about VoteFair, why he thinks
it's the best, why he thinks it's the most winnable public proposal :-)
Do you think you could do that instead, Richard? Do you think that you could
coexist in peace?
Don't get me wrong-I have nothing against criticism. But would it be too
much to ask, for Richard to share his criticisms with us here before he
publishes them? And then we'll find out if
he can answer comments and questions regarding his statements. Richard
hasn't been very good at that so far.
You see, if there are going to be rebuttals and debate, it would be much
better to get it out of the way here, than to impose it on Democracy
Chronicles.
I suggest that our criticisms be confined to EM, and that our articles to
Democracy Chronicles be, at least primarily, about a method that we propose.
I'm not saying that Richard is the only one exhibiting the behavior to which
I refer. That common, lowdown mudfighting behavior has been all too common
at EM.
The sad thing about this is that, with the attitude I refer to, success for
voting-system reform is impossible. Each person is saying "My proposal! My
proposal!" And,
Like the 3 stooges fighting eachother while trying to get through a door in
a hurry, they get nowhere, and never will get anywhere. Too busy pullng
eachother back, to go through the door.
Too busy attacking eachother and the proposals other than their own.
The parallel with the story of King Solomon and the disputed baby is
inescapable.
But what about me? Don't I, too, say that my proposal is the best public
proposal? Sure, but there's a difference:
Though I claim that Approval is the best method in some ways, due to its
unique optimizations, I admit that I want even more strategy protection. Did
you hear that,
Condorcetists? Like you, I'd like to have more than what Approval offers.
Though, in Approval, we can deal well with defection, I'd , ideally, rather
have defection-resistance.
Note that word "ideally". Some of our rank-method advocates have a difficult
time distinguishing between "ideal" and "feasible".
Anyway, my point is that, though I'd ideally like more, I propose Approval,
because, for reasons that I've explained, it is the feasible proposal. And
also, though it isn't
Defection-resistant, defection can be well dealt with in any of the 5 ways
that I've described. I think that Condorcetists don't appreciate the power
of Approval.
But what I'm getting at is that I put feasibility above favoriteness-to-me.
Do you think that you can do that, Richard?
We should be talking about feasibility, and about "How good would be good
enough?" The attacks serve no purpose.
Now, though I don't like lowering myself to Richard's mudfighting,
catfighting, infighting level, I'm going to answer a few things that he
said:
Richard has complained that, in my counter-rebuttal, I repeated things from
my article (and from my postings too, actually). Richard catches on fast.
I repeated those things because he evidently missed them the first time.
When repeating them, I lamented that it was necessary to repeat them.
Of course, not only does Richard appear to be completely innocent of the
discussion up to his "rebuttal", but he also has failed to answer nearly all
Of the questions and comments in my counter-rebuttal. Should that be
surprising?
And please note that I'm not asking Richard to reply to those things. Nor am
I saying that he should. Do we understand that, Richard?
But I am pointing out to all of you that when someone won't reply to
questions such as the ones that I've asked Richard, it's for a reason: He
can't.
"Stonewalling it" is the best strategy for someone in that situation.
So I guess we'll never know how Richard would publicly propose VoteFair
(quasi-Kemeny), with its multi-page definition that practically no one will
read. :-)
...Or which of Approval's optimization properties will cause voters to want
to go back to Plurality.
...Or what about Approval will make people want to go back to Plurality.
.Or how and why Approval would be "controversial in hotly-contested
elections".
.Or what Condorcet's Criterion compliance would mean when voters are burying
their favorites and employing offensive burial of rivals
.to name a few of the unanswered questions.
This is long, and so I'm going to send it now, before actually wading into
Richard's text. I'll do that in a subsequent reply.
Mike Ossipoff
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