On Dec 26, 2007 3:18 PM, rob brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Dec 26, 2007 2:11 PM, Jan Kok <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > With RV, you can weaken your vote (let others "take advantage" of > > you). But it's STRICTLY VOLUNTARY. > > > > Wow, I thought I covered that. Didja miss it? Here: > > Locksmith's argument: "The system is perfectly fair. Everyone has equal > opportunity to take other people's property, so no one is at a disadvantage" > > Same exact thing. STRICTLY VOLUNTARY for residents to not raid each other's > apartments.
No, NOT the same thing! It's STRICTLY VOLUNTARY for you to leave some of your stuff unsecured. If you want to lock up all your stuff, that's fine. You yourself observed earlier that in the choice between A.) income-proportional taxation and B.) the scheme to tax people whose last names begin with A-F double and save everyone else $1, that most people would vote for the first option. In other words, people don't always vote 100% selfishly. Ever hear of welfare? Social Security? Medicare? Medicaid? Unemployment insurance? More examples of a majority (apparently) supporting schemes that benefit a minority but are a net loss for most people. E.g. most people would be better off putting their retirement money into an ordinary savings account than paying into Social Security. The savings account would give better returns. If you forbid people from voting intermediate values, then the only other option people have is to vote 100% option A or 100% option B. In the apartment analogy, people can either lock their doors, or leave their doors wide open with a note for people to help themselves. (It's still an awkward analogy.) Actually, your majority vote scheme allows voting an intermediate value, by abstaining. But then sometimes it seems you don't want to allow voting intermediate values... Be consistent, will ya? :-) Cheers, - Jan ---- Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info
