Re:

Date: Thu, 18 Jul 2013 00:36:40 -0700
From: Mitar <[email protected]>
To: liberationtech <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [liberationtech] Stability in truly "Democratic" decision
    systems
Message-ID:
    <CAKLmikMVPFGXB5GB=ifc6dbjkyuvm+wzao_x1egrczjo8fk...@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8


On Tue, Jul 9, 2013 at 8:34 PM, Peter Lindener <[email protected]> wrote:
> At his point, while we could have discussions about how best to resolve these
> cyclically ranked majority.....

"It seems that you are assuming that the possibility of cyclically ranked 
majority is the biggest issue with democracy? I could argue that the biggest 
issue is assumption that we can based on preferences
of individuals determine what would be the best for the group as a whole. Why 
exactly would this be related? Why exactly if we know what each individual 
wants for him or herself, we would know what would be best for the group? (For 
any definition of "best".) Of course you get conflicts and cycles if everyone 
looks only at his or her own interests.

I found it a bit premature optimization that we are concerned how to optimize 
voting among given choices when we should be maybe more concerned how the 
choices are constructed. Because this is the big question. Not how can we find 
fancy ways to sum up the votes among given options."

The issue is that we are always given options to choose from. But we are hardly 
ever consulted in preparation of those options. Is this really democracy? To be 
allowed to vote which among two kings or
queens (or hundred or whatever number) will rule you for next four or five 
years? Beautiful.

So my question is more: how can we get new ideas and new solutions to issues 
from participation of everybody? How can we get people to be able to contribute 
to the solution to the issue, not just to choose among provided solutions?"

This is why we can't allow geeks to hijack the entire issue of electronic 
voting without adult supervision. This is why "Liquid Democracy" is not 
democracy.

Mitar illustrates what is actually the geek's common yet shocking disregard for 
the rights of the individual, and a frighteningly casual willingness to replace 
the individual's rights with "group interests" as defined by a few radicals 
coding the system. That's called "collectivism," and it turns out the way 
collectivism so often does -- a ruse of fake democracy that is created to 
enable the few to take power over the many. By inciting indignation over the 
fact that individuals only look to individual interests, as if that is 
pre-defined as "bad," a few manipulators can pretend they are obtaining 
"people's democracy" for the group (this was the fallacy of communism and 
fascism).

The idea that "choices" could be engineered into a free voting system by coders 
that individuals in the society themselves don't provide is another scary 
feature of these "reformed" voting systems -- again, unsupervised and 
unaccountable coders trumping real democracy and civil rights.

Anarchist hackers want to achieve by code what they couldn't achieve by 
authentic free speech and free association and real democratic consensus.

http://3dblogger.typepad.com/wired_state/2011/02/the-seven-deadly-flaws-of-online-democracy-.html
http://3dblogger.typepad.com/wired_state/2012/05/direct-democracy-is-not-democracy-.html

Catherine A. Fitzpatrick
--
Too many emails? Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password by emailing 
moderator at [email protected] or changing your settings at 
https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech

Reply via email to