Ha ha, just the small problems we are going to look at:
'how to make democracy's time horizon longer?'
Great Q.; solutions perhaps less easy to find (or at least ones that might actually extend the horizon)
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Ha ha, just the small problems we are going to look at:
'how to make democracy's time horizon longer?'
Great Q.; solutions perhaps less easy to find (or at least ones that might actually extend the horizon)
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h4890
@ChrisMayLA6 Hmm, this requires serious out of the boxing thinking. What about continuous overlapping voting?
Instead of voting every 4 years, and risking losing to one side or another, thus losing the benfits of long term policies, what about elections for a part of the parliament every year or every second year to avoid the all or nothing approach? It would be a phased approach.
Another thing I could imagine is abolishing formal parties and the modern party structure. The parliament
@ChrisMayLA6 would be a bunch of citizens, and they of course would have to cooperate, but they would not have a party, and party policy to force them.
Nietzsche warned against political parties and saw it as a threat to democracy. I can definitely see how that could be the case.
A third tried and true, would be the greek system of adding more random change to the mix to make sure to really get a peoples parliament.
That might, on the other hand make governance very volatile and difficult
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