True freedom is also the choice not to participate at all (the right to silence). Mandating voting is just un-American.Voting must be mandatory!
True freedom is also the choice not to participate at all (the right to silence). Mandating voting is just un-American.Voting must be mandatory!
Indeed, let's consider the reasonableness. Election results are an emergent property of aggregates of votes. A sand heap is an emergent property of aggregates of individual sand grains; a cloud is an emergent property of individual water droplets; etc. The heap and the cloud are independent of the state of any single sand grain or water droplet. Since we can choose any grain or particle and the same would be true, the heap and cloud are independent of the state of any of its grains or particles.Let's consider the reasonableness of this claim. If no one's vote counts, then how can any election be decided? Clearly votes counted since it is only by people casting votes that someone won and someone lost the election.
By definition, the result of an election is always decided by others. By legislation, we have to accept the consequences of that decision. Whether you vote or not does not have any bearing on the two previous statements. What you call "meekly" accepting is simply recognition of the reality of the situation.Whether someone wants to admit it or not, elections have consequences. If you choose not to participate, then you choose to meekly accept the consequences decided entirely by others. You give up your voice in the outcome and become bound by those that did not give up their voice (and whose voice is no louder or weaker than yours would have been).
I'm still trying to parse the meaning of this stat. You seem to be connecting the overall total number of votes (which are spread across many elections) with the number of tie elections, but I don't see how they connect. What does the 1/7500 number indicate? If you vote 7500 times over the course of your life, you'll participate in one tie?No. It means that if you look at all of the votes cast in all state and federal elections, one in 7,500 were cast in elections that ended in a tie or were decided by one vote. Half of those, of course, were cast in favor of the winning candidate in those races, or one in fifteen thousand. Looking at just federal elections, the number was more like one in a hundred thousand.
Well said.You absolutely have the right to decide not to vote. I have the right to think that it is a foolish decision. Just as you have the right to think that deciding to vote is a foolish decision.
That's not the way a democracy works. People have the freedom to participate or not participate.Voting must be mandatory!
This is a demonstration of the limited scope of science and mathematics to express value in human societies not a lack of value for individual votes.Indeed, let's consider the reasonableness. Election results are an emergent property of aggregates of votes. A sand heap is an emergent property of aggregates of individual sand grains; a cloud is an emergent property of individual water droplets; etc. The heap and the cloud are independent of the state of any single sand grain or water droplet. Since we can choose any grain or particle and the same would be true, the heap and cloud are independent of the state of any of its grains or particles.
But the context is not the human value of a single vote, which I agree is ill-defined and outside the purview of science. Voting on principle is a perfectly legitimate reason to vote; I'm not arguing with that.This is a demonstration of the limited scope of science and mathematics to express value in human societies not a lack of value for individual votes.
Although I am responding to your TS post, I read the entire thread before doing so.Looking over Florida's election results this morning, I'm wondering why people vote. I don't mean people in general, I mean individuals: why do you vote?
I'd guess that you have a better chance of dying on the drive to the voting booth than having your particular ballot actually affect the election (this may still be true even if you mail in your vote!). If your vote is ineffectual, why bother?
IMO your argument is counterfactual with the reality of how human societies operate. The loner voter in isolation is the corner case. We are individuals but in small groups we couple with other human minds/bodies in sync with shared ideals in resonance. These small groups sync with other groups up the food chain. The synchronizing effect of one, two, three individuals with limited coupling can spread to affect the entire structure.But the context is not the human value of a single vote, which I agree is ill-defined and outside the purview of science. Voting on principle is a perfectly legitimate reason to vote; I'm not arguing with that.
What I am arguing is the notion that every vote counts, i.e., in the context of election results. As elections are well-defined systems, they are firmly within the scope of math and science.
Put another way: if you vote because it makes you feel good, then there is no argument. But if you vote because you think it "makes your voice heard" or has some causal effect on the election, then my argument stands.
In the area we live in we had a Proposition on the Ballot, in my neighborhood a local developer wants to build and accommodate for 1600 new students where I work. But, I didn't vote for it rather voted against it. Without opposition by petition we collected enough signatures to bring it to a vote, as of yesterday not all votes by mail have came in yet, Friday will declare most but not all, it will not conclude until the 20th then it will be determined. As of yesterday it was off by a single vote either way.If your vote is ineffectual, why bother?
Each droplet of water or grain of sand contributes equally to the emergent properties you describe.Indeed, let's consider the reasonableness. Election results are an emergent property of aggregates of votes. A sand heap is an emergent property of aggregates of individual sand grains; a cloud is an emergent property of individual water droplets; etc. The heap and the cloud are independent of the state of any single sand grain or water droplet. Since we can choose any grain or particle and the same would be true, the heap and cloud are independent of the state of any of its grains or particles.
Is it not reasonable to conclude the same about individual votes? I ask again: if I can remove your vote and the result doesn't change, then how exactly did your vote matter?
By definition, the result of an election is always decided by others. By legislation, we have to accept the consequences of that decision. Whether you vote or not does not have any bearing on the two previous statements. What you call "meekly" accepting is simply recognition of the reality of the situation.
The association of voice with voting is a common one, and unintentionally apt. People say "let your voice be heard" at the ballot, but that is like trying to talk in a room full of shouting people: no one can hear what you're saying.
This is the key statement. By distributing the decision power equally, the design eliminates the power of any single vote. That's my entire point!The democratic process of voting, however, is designed to distribute the decision . . .
Love the video, and I think it's a good metaphor for how human groups can phase-lock. But change some of the parameters and entirely different phenomena result. Make the metronomes digital, or remove the coupling (to mimic, say, partisanship), and cacophony reigns. Change the bpm of each metronome (to mimic individuality) and you'll get a time-varying syncopation instead of lock-step. Make some of the bpm ratios irrational (to mimic extremism) and you'll get chaos.IMO your argument is counterfactual with the reality of how human societies operate. The loner voter in isolation is the corner case. We are individuals but in small groups we couple with other human minds/bodies in sync with shared ideals in resonance. These small groups sync with other groups up the food chain. The synchronizing effect of one, two, three individuals with limited coupling can spread to affect the entire structure.
Which is to say, each contribution is vanishingly small. There is no other reasonable way to describe the contribution of any single particle. Do you agree or not?Each droplet of water or grain of sand contributes equally to the emergent properties you describe.
Your logic is flawed, as the conclusion "you can remove all votes without changing the results" does not follow from the premise "no single vote matters", so disproving the conclusion does nothing to the premise. You argued: If red is a color, then elephants are carnivores and then disproved that elephants are carnivores.You asked how my vote mattered if you can remove it and the result doesn't change. Let's go with that.
What happens if you remove all the votes that don't matter?
Since your premise is that no one's vote matters, then that means you can remove all the votes without changing the result, which is obviously not the case.
We agree, at least, that votes in a general election do not matter much.Now, if you want your vote to really matter -- far, far more so than it does in a general election -- get involved at the precinct level. The platforms and candidates are decided by a remarkably small number of people who choose to take the time and make the effort to participate at the point in the process where it all begins.
One million of pesos is composed of, no surprise, one million of pesos. Each peso, per se, is a trivial amount.Why vote? Because every vote counts.
It is not a question of whether your vote would make a difference or not.
You do not know the outcome before voting. Thus it is the aggregate of all votes that collectively makes a difference. That is democracy.
I am suggesting that social resonance is a factor in individual actions like deciding to vote with groups as a way for the least effort of voting to produce the greatest effect for some cause. The choice of voting or not can't be explained in the simple mathematical terms of the value of one vote in isolation. It's the collective power of individuals working as teams for a desired result that matter.Love the video, and I think it's a good metaphor for how human groups can phase-lock. But change some of the parameters and entirely different phenomena result. Make the metronomes digital, or remove the coupling (to mimic, say, partisanship), and cacophony reigns. Change the bpm of each metronome (to mimic individuality) and you'll get a time-varying syncopation instead of lock-step. Make some of the bpm ratios irrational (to mimic extremism) and you'll get chaos.
In any case, the context here is not human society -- I don't need convincing that voting is truly meaningful in that context. The context here is the individual's choice to vote or not vote. So, unless you are suggesting that the reason individuals vote is because of some societal resonance (which is an interesting, if dark, proposition), then society has no bearing on my argument.
Like I said in post#12, they must count or else there is NO REASON to exclude certain populations, just because they may not vote the "right way".What I am arguing is the notion that every vote counts, i.e., in the context of election results. As elections are well-defined systems, they are firmly within the scope of math and science.
Let's go ahead and stipulate agreement.Which is to say, each contribution is vanishingly small. There is no other reasonable way to describe the contribution of any single particle. Do you agree or not?
??????This is the key statement. By distributing the decision power equally, the design eliminates the power of any single vote. That's my entire point!
I have no interest in coming up with an alternative to voting, even if such a thing were possible. I'm simply curious why intelligent, rational people vote.Let's go ahead and stipulate agreement.
What is it you want? What system do you envision in which your "vote" (whatever form it might take) "counts" (by whatever metric "counting" is measured)?
As I said, if the vote can be removed and the result of the election does not change, then your vote does not matter. This is true whether the vote is between 5 people or 5 million. Obviously, if the movie vote between you and your friends ends up 3 to 2 and you were on the 3 side, removing your vote would change the result. In this case, you can proudly say that your vote counted! But the probability that this happens goes to zero as the vote-size increases. I don't mean the probability that the vote will end up in a tie -- that gets very small, but not zero. I mean that as soon as the vote-size is large enough that there is systematic uncertainty of at least 1 vote, then any single vote becomes statistically meaningless.You get together with four other friends and are trying to decide what movie to go see. For whatever reason, you must all go to the same movie and you have two choices. You really want to see one of the movies and you really do not want to see the other. Do you vote? Or do you not vote on the basis that your vote doesn't count? Let's say everyone votes and it ends up three to two. If you were one of the two, does that mean that your vote didn't count? What other method of making the choice would constitute every person's input "counting"?
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