Only Educated People Should Have The Right To Vote in Elections.' What Is Your View?
Only Educated People Should Have The Right To Vote in Elections.' What Is Your View?
Only Educated People Should Have The Right To Vote in Elections.' What Is Your View?
sour over the course of five years in office. Ironically, these are countries close
to the ideal democracy and with high education levels. What we need today is
more then mere education, more than being teaching individuals skills for the
workplace. We need to teach politics and discernment. We need to instil in
populations the strong decisiveness of what is right from wrong. We have long
preached about giving rights to individuals and that individuals should be free to
exercise those rights. However, have we stopped to give individuals the
necessary tools to exercise those rights effectively? Educated or not, the
education received may well be irrelevant if what is taught does not address this
aspect. Einstein once said that God does not play dice. Can you imagine how
our physical world would be if things were merely random. We cannot afford to
play dice with who governs us or generations preceding us will have a greater
problem at hand. This is evident with the immense task ahead of the new
Obama administration.
Perhaps the educated may choose the most effective government, however the
consequences would be disastrous. What is the message sent to communities
when the educated are the only ones voting? It essential strips the uneducated
off the rights to decide from himself how he would be governed. It is effectively
then, the educated ruling over the uneducated. May I also point out that the
truth of the matter is that with higher education levels do we have greater
earning power in todays knowledge based economy. In other words, it may
seem like hegemony of one social class over the other. We fragment a society
and the consequence of that is worse as compared to a less than competent
government. Governments may change to suit the people however; to reunite
divided people is difficult. How long will it take before the highly educated rich
South Koreans and the less educated poor North Koreans join hands once again?
The fall of aristocracy in most societies has shown how clear divisions in society
cannot thrive. Dividing the people may cause great social upheavals that could
lead to wide spread violence. It would take immense amount of energy to quell
such violence, especially so for a group of once free citizens. The loss of rights
to vote is the loss of deciding what benefits and policies you can gain. It is like a
parent losing control over her teenage child. It is beyond your ability to change
the situation. Should we risk such a possibility just to allow the elite to lord over
the rest and decide for what is the best? The Orwellian utopia is too great a risk
to take. Let us learn from history not to commit such a mistake again.
Besides, if a democracy calls for the mandate of the people, then the elitist
movement is against the very grain of modern democracy. The Greek
democracy was to allow the elites to decide, however in our progressive society
today, we cannot fall back on that system. In a nutshell, I have present to you
how the idea that the educated can decide the best is essentially flawed. I have
also shown you that the consequence of the implementation of an elitist system
is a great cost on society.
perhaps, real change might come about. A charismatic voice with proven
integrity and an adequate, probably pre-existing, public profile does stand a slim
chance of gaining election. Martin Bell comes to mind. But democratic
participation in this sense is a far greater personal commitment than simply
voting, and its not in any way a realistic option for the vast proportion of the
population for as long as our system, our parties and their supporting mass
media all continue as they are.)
Might opting to not vote allow a political rule worse than a rotten democracy to
prevail? Whether the low turnouts for European (34% in 2009) and local
elections (32% in 2012) have actually created change for the worse is, at the
very least, moot. Beyond that, I suggest we just dont know. History doesnt
offer a comparable lesson in the consequences of voter non-participation in a
western-style democracy.
We can say with certainty that voting for the candidates were given and the
system they represent perpetuates the status quo.
We also have to acknowledge the grim reality that significant numbers of people
sometimes vote for monsters. Its always invidious to raise Nazi Germany in any
discussion and of course were a long way from the situation that pertained in
pre-Second-World-Germany, but it is a prime example: the Nazi Party was the
most popular party in the Reichstag after elections in July and November 1932.
In some circumstances, voting most certainly does not prevent evil prevailing.
Whether incorporating a NOTA option, adopting PR or any other reform any
attempt to improve any democracy, in the UK or anywhere else, needs to keep
that lesson in mind. There is more to the governance of a nation than the means
by which a political party is voted in.
Looking For Small Mercies
That leaves us with voting for the small differences between the parties, for
marginal gains voting for the least bad option on offer. If you are anything
other than wholeheartedly in favour of the status quo, then voting in this sense,
in the context of the UK today, is to say that I know any vote cast is a vote for a
flawed/failing/failed system, but I think voting for this party, knowing all thats
wrong and despite all thats wrong, is better than voting for this other party
because at least they _____. And here we all fill in the blank according to our
own honestly held views; our prejudices, beliefs, biases and often-but-notalways vain hopes.
Lets be clear these really are small mercies wed be looking for. Its hard to
over-state the impotence of most voters, when not even tactical voting is likely
to have much impact. By way of simple, blunt evidence, Labour have as targets
just 106 seats in their planning for the coming general election all the rest are
foregone conclusions.
We can be quite sure that in the 544 foregone conclusions we can cast our
vote with the blank filled-in and/or as tactically as we might fondly imagine, but
perhaps, but real hardships and currently declining living standards aside our
collective affluence now is far greater than it was even just those few decades
ago. The bulk of the public has a lot to lose nowadays, whatever the wealth
gap(s).
I suggest a very low turnout will only trigger large-scale popular protest if those
in power are perceived to abuse their positions to an even greater extent than
in recent years, but that if push does come to shove, the public would readily
cite the illegitimacy of the government as just cause. (At that juncture, watching
which way our mass media jumps would be very interesting.)
If I Do?
If I do turn out to vote yet again, Ill be hoping that some marginal difference
between the parties, not as merely promised but as it transpires on the ground,
will salve my conscience. This would be the fill-in-the-blank time as referred to
above, when I would be hoping that something concrete, observable and
measurable; something I believe is a positive thing, will actually transpire, so
that I can point to it and say that only happened because of the party I voted
for.
Now Or Later?
Perhaps whether to vote or not comes down to a choice between the long and
the short term.
The long-term is the non-vote, a tactical choice with at least some meaning,
cast in the belief that eventually a de-legitimised establishment will act to
create meaningful change or that the public might react and push for change
with a voice that cant be ignored.
The short-term is the belief that X or Y party will do something positive, however
small that something might be, and that that something is more valuable than
the long-term de-legitimisation goal.
Due Justice
Where does all this actually leave us?
I suggest that, rather than arguing over assertions that people should or should
not vote, instead we ought to be fully conscious that we have that long-term
versus short-term choice. That choice is, in itself, a freedom to be valued.
Recognising that fact would be a step towards affording the struggles for
democracy, past and present, due justice.
As for actually making the choice: for as long as we are not coerced, for as long
as we are not fearful because of our politics, for as long as we have the
intellectual freedom to assess that long-term versus short-term distinction, we
can make our decision on a moral, personal level and be actively grateful for
that.
If we want to promote change, then once we have recognised our own freedom
and the long- versus short-term choice we have to make, framed in the terms
outlined above, then perhaps the most valuable thing we could be doing is
working to make others similarly conscious of that choice.
Source: 13 Dec 2013, Mike Butcher (Former BBC editor)
Dont let ignorant people vote
A provocative question for sure; however, Im not bringing it up for shock value,
but rather to give us all pause.
If I were to ask you to ingest an unknown medicine from someone who knew
nothing about the medical field, you probably wouldnt do it. And I doubt many
of us would feel comfortable as a shareholder in a company that asked people
who knew nothing about business to hire its next CEO?
Yet we all know people who gleefully admit they know nothing about politics,
dont have time to find out what the current issues are or even know how the
government works, but go out and vote. Want to know why it seems Washington
is run by a bunch of idiots? Blame this hiccup in our political system for starters.
Whats a solution? Weed out some of the ignorant by making people who want
to vote first pass a test modeled on the one given to those who want to become
citizens.
In an effort to win over ignorant voters, political campaigns are no longer
targeting the movable middle as much as the easily misled. Instead of
intelligent debates about important topics such as health care reform and cashstrapped states, we have an exchange of easy to remember catchphrases such
as Obamacare and War on Unions all in the race to pander to people who
cant explain what Congress does.
Or have a firm grasp of how tax dollars are spent.
In a recent CNN poll, more than a third of the people questioned wanted to see
cuts in military spending, which is a good debate to have. The problem is the
poll also revealed most Americans think the military takes up 30 percent of the
budget when in reality its 19 percent. If we dont know how much money is
being spent, how can we intelligently say its too much? And what to make of
the 20 percent of folks polled who believe public broadcasting represents 10
percent of the budget, when its more like a 10th of 1 percent?
Im not suggesting someone needs to be a Rhodes scholar to vote.
But voters should at least be able to name the three branches of government.
Voters should understand what a trade deficit is and how laws are made.
Before getting all bent out of shape by my assertion that you or someone you
love is ignorant, please know I am not referring to the dictionarys first definition
of the word, which typically means an uneducated or unsophisticated person. I
While the Constitution lists the reasons why a citizen cannot be denied the right
to vote, it does not explicitly say it is a federal right. This is why felon
disenfranchisement and mental competency laws, as they pertain to voting,
vary from state to state.
Im not suggesting we kick people out of the political process, only that we
require them to have an agreed upon understanding of what that process is. If
people are too busy to read up on the government, the Department of
Homeland Security is not going to escort them out of the country or take
away away their citizenship. At any point in which ignorant voters are fed up
with being on the outside looking in, they can go to the post office, pick up a
brochure with all of the questions and answers in it, and study free of charge.
Sounds harsh?
It is.
But at this crucial juncture with at least two wars, a budding energy crisis, a
growing trade deficit, etc., do we really have the luxury of hand-holding? There
simply needs to be more required of us as responsible voters than being born 18
years ago. Perhaps if we weed out the ignorant voters, politicians will no longer
feel the need to dumb down the conversation in hopes of getting their attention.
And then if were really lucky, maybe the ignorant politicians will go away as
well.
At least one can dream.