Clearly the people in Russia elected the party they wanted....now the losing team (1 party being communist) is bitching. And what is shocking is so is the United States and other Western democratic countries. I mean really, is the United States really going to bitch about the communist party NOT getting elected by the people? You would think after Bush's first election, the US would butt out of calling other elections 'rigged'http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7126056.stm (one of many articles on the bbc)http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7124585.stm[Edited on December 3, 2007 at 8:06 PM. Reason : .]
12/3/2007 7:55:05 PM
Russia didn't even allow US election observers into the country. From the sounds of it, massive fraud was going on, shit like ballot-stuffing and jailing dissenters.There is no parallel between the US 2000 presidential election.
12/3/2007 8:07:24 PM
12/3/2007 8:08:33 PM
Russian and other international observers are always welcome into our country during election times.
12/3/2007 8:11:00 PM
^^^a rigged election is a rigged election.its just like lying (actually it is lying). There are no 'white' lies.[Edited on December 3, 2007 at 8:11 PM. Reason : ^]
12/3/2007 8:11:13 PM
^^ i did a little bit of research and your wide flung "always" is not justified[Edited on December 3, 2007 at 8:13 PM. Reason : .]
12/3/2007 8:12:49 PM
12/3/2007 8:13:58 PM
^ you know, it makes me wonder why Prawn Star would just go ahead and say that shit theni mean, he doesn't knowfucking stupid
12/3/2007 8:15:26 PM
12/3/2007 11:20:22 PM
biased website dude. Find me a more legitimate source then whitehouse.gov claiming how fair our elections are b.c of "observers"When whitehouse.gov posted saddam had anal butt sex w/ osama and Iraq's nuclear missiles were pointed at granny's doorstep i'm sure you devoured every word, picked up your stars n stripes, and were like git-er-dun lets get them iraqi's in 2003.
12/3/2007 11:24:40 PM
you're losing your mind, mantake a break. regroup. work on your analogies
12/3/2007 11:27:37 PM
There is an extremely high coincidence of murders related to reporters who cover stories unfavorable to the Putin administration (220 murders, only 6 have been solved in a country that solves 80% of their murders). Shows and media that are critical of United Russia have been taken off the air, and state owned oil company Gasprom has bought many of the stations these programs had aired on. Police and soldiers are used to arrest and intimidate dissidents. Employers tell their employees to vote for United Russia. People who are against Putin are painted as "anti Russian traitors" and "American agents". Its about voter suppression and a brutal campaign to silence political dissent.I can hardly call that Russia electing the party they wanted. It was Russia electing the only party available. Don't fall into the fallacy of believing they have the same political freedoms or choices that we do. You honestly don't know enough about Russian politics to make an informed decision about this topic Golvoko. Its essentially the rise of totalitarianism and one party politics in Russia.[Edited on December 3, 2007 at 11:31 PM. Reason : .]
12/3/2007 11:28:31 PM
Golovko, I don't know what you're deal is. You foreign? Or just an idiot?Were you the one that made such a big deal a while back about having a basque girlfriend? Because that would also explain a lot. Not because it would explain a lot in general, but merely from people of your...ah, shall we say...intellectual strata.At any rate, do you know how we can tell that we don't have a horribly flawed democracy? The opposition isn't losing its shit in the street. There's some bitching, yeah, but nothing serious, nothing that can't be explained away by simply being upset at having lost. Gore contents himself with making jokes about 2000, and Kerry barely says anything at all.Compare this to so much of the rest of the world, where a contest means blood in the streets. Where is that in the US? Do you think we are incapable of a proper riot?A lot of things in this country are broken, and there are negative things that can be said about the voting process, mostly related to third parties. But at least among the frontrunners, American elections are fair.
12/3/2007 11:40:46 PM
12/3/2007 11:42:40 PM
Back to the topic of this thread.....I sometimes wonder this question myself. A democracy is essentially rule by majority. It's essentially a giant ad populum argument; the correct choice of action is the most popular one. But this assumes that the people are (equally) educated enough to vote on a decision. What if the people are not all educated equally? What if the majority of people are not as intelligent or thoughtful compared to the minority? And even if everybody is equally intelligent, that doesn't necessarily mean that they'll all agree on an issue.In any case, the most popular rules are basically the ones that thrive in a democracy. By virtue of the system, the "will of the people" is considered to be right. But what if they aren't right? What if the majority of people make a decision that could be considered immoral or unethical, or suppose that the decision simply hurts them in the long run (but helps them in the short term, which is why the majority voted for it)? And I don't remember who said it, but there's a saying to the effect that, in a democracy, the people will vote themselves money out of the public treasury.This is sort of off topic. The question is simply if a "fair" democracy can exist. On the one hand, it sucks to be you if you're on the losing side of the argument. Want to legalize drugs? Too bad, more than half of the population think drugs are evil! Think that current gun control laws are too strict? Better get used to it, the majority of people can't get enough of it! Short of unanimous agreement, it's impossible to please everybody in a democracy. There's not really any mechanism built in for compromise either; either one side wins or the other side does. There's no half-assing it. In that sense, democracies are inherently unfair. On the other hand, rule by popularity is simply the convention of the system. It makes it easier to make tough choices; just leave it up to each voter to decide. Whichever decision gets more votes is clearly the correct choice to make, because more people agree with it. Nobody has to argue or bitch about anything or make the issue complicated, it's simply left up to each individual.Bottom line; I think the answer to your question is no. In a democracy, fairness is traded in for convenience.
12/4/2007 1:06:17 AM
^Fuck, man. Try reading the Constitution. People don't vote on issues (with initiatives and referendums being the exception), they vote for candidates who vote on issues. This isn't a direct democracy. It's a representative democracy. A republic. And it is set up that way specifically because our founding fathers didn't expect the people to be educated on every issue.
12/4/2007 1:12:21 AM
^Read the post, he never even mentions American democracy, he's just discussing the fundamentals of a democratic system in general.
12/4/2007 1:15:06 AM
True, but there are no practicing direct democracies that I know of. Representative democracies with checks and balances do a lot to nullify the "tyranny of the majority" phenomenon that he is referring to.
12/4/2007 1:19:25 AM
Yup. Also, it just keeps the process efficient. Just think how busy the system would be if everyone voted on every issue that came up...
12/4/2007 1:22:01 AM
12/4/2007 10:42:52 AM
^^, ^^^ True enough. I forgot to add the disqualifier that ours isn't a true democracy, but a representative democracy as you mentioned. But some of the same problems still stand, no? The people will simply vote for the representative who promises to get them the most free shit, which is pretty much what happens now. Besides, what happens when the guy that people voted for turns out to not have all of their interests in mind, or none at all?
12/4/2007 10:51:55 AM
12/4/2007 10:53:39 AM
12/4/2007 12:10:42 PM
12/4/2007 2:28:28 PM
What about the congressman who on a vote audit found to have had votes cast by dead people and family pets.
12/4/2007 2:29:40 PM
Nah. "Individual rights are not subject to a public vote; a majority has no right to vote away the rights of a minority; the political function of rights is precisely to protect minorities from oppression by majorities"
12/4/2007 7:42:30 PM
democracy is a bad idea because the individual is subjected to the tyranny of the majorityif it were truly free there would be an option to opt out of the state
12/5/2007 11:57:07 AM