- 1 Post
- 22 Comments
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Science Memes@mander.xyz•North America contains some of the longest continuous deciduous forest records on the planet.English
0·15 days agoSorry but such a screencap requires a source. This is almost surely misinformation.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
1·18 days agoAdministrative costs are high in health care and education (which are not really the US federal government), but I can’t find data on this for the labor costs to administrative professionals in government. Source?
Labor costs are high for the federal government, but I thought a lot of that was pensions + regular raises. I don’t think these things should be attributed to capitalism run amok.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
1·18 days agoIdk if we want to be in a state that can only write ~1000 characters to regulate AI, and that will take at least a 2 month lag?
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
1·19 days agoMy gut reaction is exhaustion. I would like this if folks had the time, resources, and politicians weren’t so tied up in party politics.
If you have a functional legislative arm of government, then it produces too many bits of text for the average person to keep up with it, and it’s not terribly efficient for them to try. I don’t need to know the particulars of industrial zoning policy, but I do want it to be sensical.
And if the politicians decide to bundle things together, lots of wedging becomes available. This seems less common for single-issue policy juries (one could even constrain their range on creation).
But in RCV and good support: sure. I think it could be made to work.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
2·19 days agoI like this! I do prefer physical ballots (we’ve already had a few scares with new tech being hard for folks of certain generations), but that can totally be implemented.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
1·19 days agoI’m too many levels in and I can’t tell which combination you’re talking about XD
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
1·19 days agoAdministration in non-profits and schools mostly.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
1·19 days agoI think I disagree that each group needs to know the full constitutional law. Politicians often have aids for this, and this proposal doesn’t need to remove the courts. Let them summon a judge and negotiate the final language, or contract out multiple versions and take public comments.
Similarly for the teachers: in court rooms and congress, they aren’t permanent hires. They’re brought in by choice of the group (or someone organizing/arguing to the group). In most areas it is not so difficult to find well credentialed experts, who may in turn suggest other people to talk to (or, should any of them seem sus, may inspire a sortitioned member to suggest a critic). If data is bad, congress can get folks to go and collect the data they want in the way they want. When your job is to understand one issue, I think you have the time to consider multiple views and sort through the claims.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
1·20 days agoThis is very similar to how we do it with juries; a body of the people to stamp/implement the laws written by congress and rules for reading them from judges. I think it’s an improvement.
But I do want to vouch for how teachable people can be. And I think it really changes how we fund/run/manage education when ‘functioning in the senate’ is a mandatory skill.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
3·20 days agoI worry that a lot of it comes from scale. It’s expensive/tricky to scale up human flexability; I think I’ve seen well meaning people design systems they intended to be human, and got much worse results than the lawyers and bankers. There’s some skill here.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
2·20 days agoJust logging that this doesn’t match any data I’ve seen, unless you take Nazi to be an obscenely broad tent. Sources + definitions required.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
1·20 days agoOh that’s fun. I like this, but you really need that RCV to avoid vote splitting. I wonder if it’s better off as approval? Strategic voting around a sortician option would be very weird.
Cause RCV for a sotrician option is, statistically, likely to pick a moderate voter who leans towards the thing you dislike. There’s something anti-inductive here.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
2·20 days agoThe upvotes are in! There’s at least dozens. 2 dozens.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
2·20 days agoConsensus is quite hard to corrupt by design. You trade off some substantial amount of efficiency, and most groups aren’t willing to commit to working towards it.
They believe everyone’s got some good in them, and that good will end up getting the important decisions to happen. I note that they don’t seem to actually control for this belief all that hard. Perhaps anyone who doesn’t believe gets too impatient and moves on.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
2·20 days agoOn the extreme end, Quakers. Consensus is clearly a democratic voting scheme, and they’ve run everything from churches to universities to states to companies with it.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
4·20 days agoThere are indeed ways to design it poorly; I’ll just point again to juries to say that we know how to do it competently. I’ll rephrase the objections in terms of juries (but please note the quotes are from a hyperbolic strawman, and not literally what you said. I hope my replies to the strawman are still useful).
“People who don’t care about the particular law/case will refuse to join a jury and they’ll all get stuck in endless deliberation” - being on the jury is not always optional! While there are strategies to avoid being a juror, the large majority of folks don’t use them. People get real nervous about perjury. Also, we have several levers of control here. Congress salaries+benefits aren’t bad, getting an important position might be akin to winning a lottery. Many folks skip voting day because they feel uninformed or are required to work, but we educate jurists and require companies to give time off for their service. Finally, if a jury is stuck we call a new one; by random draw we’ll eventually get a lot of all people from one side or the other. Gridlock is only ever stochastic.
“People could bribe the juries for the outcomes they want!” - extremely risky, the state knows who is on the jury at the same time as everyone else, predicting it ahead of time is impossible, and we strongly regulate the interactions of juries + invested parties once they’re chosen. Note that we can assign political decision bodies to fairly narrow issues, so managing this at scale isn’t so difficult.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
1·20 days agoEh - sounds like arguments against centralization of power to me.
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
2·20 days agoWhich, under a sortition vote, would mean we would have a chance!
Artisian@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What is your preferred form of proportional representation, and why?English
1·20 days agoI think we haven’t tested democracy variations quite far enough. I agree that the first-past-the-post model in capitalism has proven extremely vulnerable to mis/disinformation, and made it possible to benefit from the idiocy of your peers. But I don’t think we’ve seen, say, RCV and proportional representation + robust finance laws prove nearly so bad.
Also, I think this take is disingenuous to the roots of democracy. It is a social technology used for legitimacy in tons of situations by many groups, for a variety of reasons. Often it is neither dumb nor a method of obvious control.


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