Is Direct Democracy the Solution to Capitalism?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on the relationship between direct democracy and capitalism, exploring whether a system led by individuals with higher intelligence or education could serve as a viable alternative to capitalism. Participants debate the merits and drawbacks of democracy, the potential for authoritarianism, and the implications of voter education and qualifications.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose replacing democracy with governance by individuals with higher IQ or education, suggesting it could lead to a more efficient system akin to socialism.
  • Others argue that democracy is flawed but preferable to alternatives, emphasizing that many individuals with high IQs may not be suitable leaders.
  • A participant distinguishes between democracy as a political system and capitalism as an economic system, noting that the U.S. operates more like a republic where power is concentrated among the wealthy elite.
  • One participant highlights Switzerland as a model of direct democracy, claiming it allows for better decision-making based on argumentation.
  • Concerns are raised about the potential for democracy to devolve into inefficiency and special interest manipulation, referencing the "Problem of the Commons." Suggestions for reform include intelligent, randomly selected representatives and public voting on proposed laws.
  • Some participants advocate for a national examination to ensure voters have a basic understanding of government and election issues, questioning whether this should apply to voters, candidates, or both.
  • Discussions also touch on the influence of lobbyism in the U.S. and the perceived ignorance of the electorate, contrasting it with the education level in Switzerland.
  • There are assertions that democracy allows populists to exploit public emotions, leading to undesirable outcomes, and a suggestion that voting should be a privilege rather than a right.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views, with no consensus reached on whether direct democracy is superior to capitalism or whether governance should be restricted to those with higher intelligence. Disagreement persists regarding the effectiveness and desirability of current democratic systems.

Contextual Notes

Some arguments depend on assumptions about the nature of intelligence and education, as well as the effectiveness of direct democracy in larger populations. The discussion also reflects varying definitions of democracy and its practical implications.

datatec
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What's your opinion?

Scrap democracy and instead allow people with higher IQ/education run and organize a state. Would this not result in a great alternative to capitalism. It is like a super-efficient socialism.

Would this lead on to totalaterianism??

CHEERS
 
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I know a lot of people with high IQ's that shouldn't be running anything.

Democracy stinks. It just stinks less than the alternatives.
 
Democracy and capitalism are not the same thing. One refers to a political system, the other to an economic system. What you describe is pretty much how the US is run, with most of the control of government in the hands of the rich and educated "elite" rather than the common people. It's called a republic. Depending on your view of US politics, you can decide for yourself if it's really a good thing. Unless you are referring to an aristocracy or dictatorship. Both of those have a ruling class or leader who is born or appointed into their position, with the belief that they have some superior ability that makes them suited for this role. True democracies are incredibly rare, and usually only work for small, local governments, not for running entire countries. Afterall, we may vote for our leaders, but even by doing that, we pass along the authority to them to make decisions on our behalf, we don't vote by referendum on every decision made. A true democracy would give every citizen a vote on every decision made by government. You can probably imagine how cumbersome and slow this would become, and you'd have a lot of non-experts making decisions that require expertise.

However, IQ is not sufficient for a good leader. Indeed, no single person can be an expert on every topic that comes before them for a decision (even geniuses aren't likely to have spent sufficient time studying both economics and science to be able to make good policy decisions on both). So, what's more important is expertise and experience in the areas of decision making. To accomplish this, politicians have expert advisors to guide them on these decisions. The places I see problems arising are 1) poor choice of advisors based on reasons other than field of expertise, 2) not listening to the advisors to try to appeal to popular opinion, 3) insufficient or inappropriate distribution of funding to implement policy.
 
We in Switzerland have a democracy (perhaps the only one which has really has earned this name) in the world. It works better then any other system I know.

That our system was less effective then other systems is only a unproven lay mostly mention by people witch are involved in the establishment.

If you have got a direct democracy it is impossible to make to bad decisions because your power depends on your arguments.
 
Selbstüberschätzug said:
We in Switzerland have a democracy (perhaps the only one which has really has earned this name) in the world. It works better then any other system I know. That our system was less effective then other systems is only a unproven lay mostly mention by people witch are involved in the establishment. If you have got a direct democracy it is impossible to make to bad decisions because your power depends on your arguments.

Democracy does have severe and persistent problems, especially with the government collecting money then handing it out to special interest groups. Eventually, it dies as it slips into inefficiencies. It is the Problem of the Commons as defined by Garrett Hardin(sp). Some good books on democracy include "Democracy: The God that Failed," "Darwinian Politics," and especially "Darwinism, Dominance, and Democracy: The Biological Bases of Authoritarianism."

There is hope however, in my opinion, for true democracy. Intelligent, randomly selected representatives to write new laws for a set length of time, a professional bureaucracy which consists of bureaus that can be dissolved by the public with a no confidence vote if they do not produce, and voting on the laws proposed by the representatives via Internet.

This would require a highly intelligent populace, one which we will need to have in the future anyway as technology advances. People, slowly must realize that humans are highly irrational in their belief systems, but understanding human nature can overcome many of these shortcomings. The heuristics and biases research is doing a lot to unravel human irrationality, and determining why we behave as we do from out evolutionary past. With understanding may come solutions. However, it may require a speciation event to a higher form of primate.
 
Well at the very least people should be required to pass a reasonable, national examination to show that they have at least a basic grasp of how the government works and what the issues of the election are.
 
fafalone said:
Well at the very least people should be required to pass a reasonable, national examination to show that they have at least a basic grasp of how the government works and what the issues of the election are.

Do you mean the voters or the candidates? Or both?
 
@nuenke:
Especially you in the USA have the problem of lobbyism in your country. We haven’t go such problems here.
Especially you in the USA have problems with the ignorance of the people. Our people are much better educated as yours because it is in the interest of the rich in Switzerland that the normal people understand what they arguments are. In the USA the exact opposite is in the Interest of the mighty class.

And by the way. Socrates was impressed by the Fact that you will be understand even by the uneducated if your arguments are logical.
 
I agree, just look at the emphasis on 'Flip-Flops'
but everyone knows that the only people in america who get to run are corporate puppets.
 
  • #10
datatec said:
What's your opinion?

Scrap democracy and instead allow people with higher IQ/education run and organize a state. Would this not result in a great alternative to capitalism. It is like a super-efficient socialism.

Would this lead on to totalaterianism??

CHEERS
I have previously argued from time to time that there should be some sort of aptitude test for the right to vote. About 25% of people that voted in the last election did not even know the running mates of Bush or Gore. Frankly, I do not trust the average mind for their knowledge of politics. (or anything else) Voting outcomes determines the foundation in which a country or state will be based and should not be taken lightly.

We do all remember that the Nazi party gained the majority seats in the parliament by votes of the people right?

Plus, I would have a hard time believing that if only people with IQs above 120 were allowed to vote, that Bush would have any chance of winning. The great fault of modern democracy is that an absolute idiot that has no clue what he's talking about will have equal say to a person with unparalleled genius.
 
  • #11
fafalone said:
Well at the very least people should be required to pass a reasonable, national examination to show that they have at least a basic grasp of how the government works and what the issues of the election are.

I agree.
Some people are just not suitable to vote.
Voting should be a privilage.

For instance, should a criminal be alowed to vote?
Guess not, yet do you call someone who unintentionally killed a person in an car accident and is sent to jail a criminal. Dilemma.

But a voting examination is a really nice idea.
Democraty is in general about the worst ideology in the world (IMHO)
It alows populists to take control.
People are stupid, not all, but the majority is.
If you alow a persone to "work" the public emotions (for instance the foreigner/ immigrant problem) you end up with a pretty nasty scenario.

I'm not saying a dictator would be a good solution, just that democratie ain't the way i'd like it to see.

Democratie is freedom you say?
Hardly, your freedom is limited by the wishes of the crowd.

So in a last funny note, i think i should rule my country on my own. :-p :biggrin: :devil:
 
  • #12
Marijn said:
I'm not saying a dictator would be a good solution, just that democratie ain't the way i'd like it to see.
Then what would you like to see?
 
  • #13
Locrian said:
I know a lot of people with high IQ's that shouldn't be running anything.
You're right, a person with a high IQ needn't be knowledgeable.
 
  • #14
Very true. I scored ridiculously high in tests administered by shrinks at Deakin University, and I can't write or do maths, and I have zero social skills.
 
  • #15
Adam said:
Very true. I scored ridiculously high in tests administered by shrinks at Deakin University, and I can't write or do maths, and I have zero social skills.
Writing is correlated with verbal IQ. Math is correlated with spatial IQ. If you did score high on an IQ test, you should be able to do both. Otherwise, something is wrong in this picture.
 
  • #16
No. I scored far above average in every aspect of all the tests. However, I also blew the chart in one area. This one area, they said, caused a problem simply because everything else was far lower.
 
  • #17
Selbstüberschätzug said:
@nuenke:
Especially you in the USA have the problem of lobbyism in your country. We haven’t go such problems here.
Especially you in the USA have problems with the ignorance of the people. Our people are much better educated as yours because it is in the interest of the rich in Switzerland that the normal people understand what they arguments are. In the USA the exact opposite is in the Interest of the mighty class.
The one thing that America does far better than any country is "freedom of speech" Many people might not be aware of this but "freedom of speech" is far more limited in Europe and in Canada. For example, the French woman who was being charged for "spreading hate" for publishing a book stating that France should control Muslim immigration. Or how the Sex Pistols, a punk band from the UK was banned from singing in the UK because they were considered a threat. Or how Professor J Rushton was being investigated for "hate crime" in Canada simply for his work in the field that he does. Or in Germany, where you can get arrested simply for doing the Nazi salute. In a democracy, views should not be silenced. Even if it is a controversial view or an unpopular view. Trying to limit views, even an unpopular one would be fascism.

Whether a hippie, a PETA extremist, a KKK clansman, views cannot get you arrested in America. Something that is not true in Canada and throughout Europe.

America might not be perfect, but the rest of the world should live up to the bar America set as far as freedom of speech.
 
  • #18
Adam said:
No. I scored far above average in every aspect of all the tests. However, I also blew the chart in one area. This one area, they said, caused a problem simply because everything else was far lower.
Then your reading skills and math skills should be at the least above average. Also this section that you "blew the chart" on. Would it be verbal or spatial related?
 
  • #19
My reading skills are fine; in fact exceptional. I just can't write. I print in block letters.

My problem with maths I personally attribute to never having really studied it, although it is supposedly also associated with something they were testing me for.

The very high scores were related to Verbal.
 
  • #20
Scientific instrument ceiling and floor effects

Adam said:
I ... blew the chart in one area. This one area, they said, caused a problem simply because everything else was far lower.
Applying the testing instrument to you produced a ceiling effect:


  • A test in which the easiest items are failed by some persons is said to produce a "floor" effect; a test in which the hardest items are passed by some persons is said to produce a "ceiling" effect. Floor and ceiling effects truncate the range in test scores, which then underestimate the full range of individual differences in the population. Floor and ceiling effects are eliminated by including easier items or more difficult items, respectively.

    Various tests, each having a quite different range of item difficulty, could yield equally valid measures of g provided each test's difficulty level were appropriate (i.e., without floor or ceiling effects) for the range of ability in the group to which it is administered. It sacrifices accuracy and wastes testing time to use a test containing item difficulty levels appropriate for the entire range of ability in the general population when only a select segment of the ability distribution in the total population is to be tested. Hence there are different tests, each measuring mostly g, that are best suited for use with groups that have a restricted range of ability... An analogy is the different types of thermometers we use for measuring temperatures in different ranges, as in a refrigerator, a room, the human body, a kitchen oven, or a blast furnace. They all measure temperature, but you wouldn't want to use a clinical thermometer in a blast furnace.
(Arthur Jensen. The g Factor. p310.)



Or perhaps you meant something else, such as that your score in one area caused a problem by being out of proportion (and not necessarily so high as to be subject to a ceiling effect) with your scores in other areas.
 
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  • #21
BlackVision said:
The one thing that America does far better than any country is "freedom of speech"
I invite you to come and live in the Netherlands for a few years and then give your opinion.

BlackVision said:
America might not be perfect, but the rest of the world should live up to the bar America set as far as freedom of speech.
In the examples you gave, people were considered a threat. If someone in the US is considered a threat they will be handled too. Many people in the US have been investigated, simple because of things they said.
 
  • #22
Monique said:
I invite you to come and live in the Netherlands for a few years and then give your opinion.
I do applaud the Netherlands for their drug laws. That's a bar others should meet. Minor drug offenders filling up US prisons is a complete waste to say the least.

Monique said:
In the examples you gave, people were considered a threat.
I consider belief in creationism a threat. It does not mean simply one acknowledging one's viewpoint should be criminal. Everyone should have the full right to express themselves without fear of persecution.

Monique said:
If someone in the US is considered a threat they will be handled too. Many people in the US have been investigated, simple because of things they said.
Not true at all. In America, you cannot get arrested simply by having a viewpoint and expressing your viewpoint. Something that is not true in Canada and in many European countries. In America, that French woman publishing a book could not be charged with anything. She would be fully protected under the 1st amendment. The "Sex Pistols" that was banned from singing in the UK. I do not know of any punk bands in America ever being banned to perform. A Nazi salute in America could not ever get you arrested although some people might attempt to beat you up. :-p

In America, the KKK can fully gather, have rallies, and show their demonstration and be under full protection under the 1st amendment. Do you think this will also be true in Canada?
 
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  • #23
Monique said:
Then what would you like to see?

Anything that eliminates people like RIP Pim Fortuyn.
Politicians are starting to spend their time more on "massaging" the people then on their true jobs.

Also people like Pim are giving out an message that, while not always untrue, causes hate.
I do agree with some of his ideas, not in the way that he (and like him many politicians all around the world) brings his ideas.

Giving voting rights to a select group eleiminates (hopefully) this method of gaining votes.

Voting is a bad idea.
 
  • #24
Wow. I was just looking at Leeuwarden on my maps two days ago. Coincidence! :D
 
  • #25
Marijn said:
Giving voting rights to a select group eleiminates (hopefully) this method of gaining votes.

Voting is a bad idea.
So who gets to have voting rights? The people who have the same world view as you?
 
  • #26
People who have a world view
 
  • #27
BlackVision said:
The one thing that America does far better than any country is "freedom of speech" Many people might not be aware of this but "freedom of speech" is far more limited in Europe and in Canada. For example, the French woman who was being charged for "spreading hate" for publishing a book stating that France should control Muslim immigration. Or how the Sex Pistols, a punk band from the UK was banned from singing in the UK because they were considered a threat. Or how Professor J Rushton was being investigated for "hate crime" in Canada simply for his work in the field that he does. Or in Germany, where you can get arrested simply for doing the Nazi salute. In a democracy, views should not be silenced. Even if it is a controversial view or an unpopular view. Trying to limit views, even an unpopular one would be fascism.

Whether a hippie, a PETA extremist, a KKK clansman, views cannot get you arrested in America. Something that is not true in Canada and throughout Europe.

America might not be perfect, but the rest of the world should live up to the bar America set as far as freedom of speech.

I really (really!) don't want to offend you but I find your views to be very 'American'.

-Eminem has been fined millions of dollars for anti-gay lyrics and calling his mother a ho.

-Britney spears got arrested for being 'too sexy' on a magazine cover back in the late 90s.


-I live in Canada and have indeed seen small KKK-ish rallys without police doing a damn thing.
Now, does this only include modern examples or can I start going on about Martin Luther King times.


Sorry I am going to have to go with netherlands on 'Most Free'. And I do not think Freedom of Speech is necessarily a good thing, I find it to be a poor substitute for freedom of thought.
The police SHOULD have arrested those racist bastards on account of encouraging hate crimes.
 
  • #28
Smurf said:
People who have a world view
world·view n. In both senses also called Weltanschauung (from German).
The overall perspective from which one sees and interprets the world.
A collection of beliefs about life and the universe held by an individual or a group.
 
  • #29
Meaning, people who don't have their head up their ass and realize that the 'World Championship' of American Football, accually doesn't reach outside the American borders.
 
  • #30
Freedom: http://www.progressive.org/webex/mcwatch.html
 
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