Jub wrote: ↑2021-01-18 12:56am
loomer wrote: ↑2021-01-17 09:13pmBy instituting such a policy we also lose out on a number of disabled candidates whose experience of being reliant on a cold, uncaring bureaucracy that would as soon see them die as not far exceeds that of any abled low-level public servant or retail worker.
True, but this is a spitballing of ideas and not a comprehensive policy outline. It wouldn't be hard to bring in disabled people to the candidate pool as well or allow them some other form of community service as a means of giving something to the community before being allowed to run for office.
I'm not sure why it just being spitballing renders commentary on an idea's issues unnecessary. When we think an idea is worthy of public consideration, we accept the idea that it may be subject to critique from those we're suggesting it to - that's a central part of the next step beyond
mere spitballing and brainstorming (mere spitballing being nothing more than 'there are no wrong answers, say whatever comes to mind', which can only meaningfully function as a prelude to a more detailed analysis of the ideas generated), to take ideas and either run with them or ask questions. To drill a little deeper, if we permit a pool of candidates an alternative form of 'community service' than
working retail (which... is not a community service) or as a low-ranking public-facing civil servant, we'd need to first adequately identify what form of community service it is we're actually seeking.
Is it experience in being at the mercy of the state and struggling to negotiate bureaucratic madness and overbearing and unwelcome interference? If so, why should any form of community service be necessary for those whose existence is, in itself, an experience in this? Is it specifically experience in community-centric action - in which case, retail work is out, while unpaid organizing, volunteering, and community-based activism is in? Is it the experience of having to struggle with the stupidity of customers and managers while barely scraping by, as originally suggested by Vendetta? These are not the same experiences, even if all three might be experienced by those engaged in precarious employment in the community-centric service sector. Which one - or is it all of them? - is
necessary for a good politician? If none of them are
necessary, why are we proposing making it a requirement?
"Doctors keep their scalpels and other instruments handy, for emergencies. Keep your philosophy ready too—ready to understand heaven and earth. In everything you do, even the smallest thing, remember the chain that links them. Nothing earthly succeeds by ignoring heaven, nothing heavenly by ignoring the earth." M.A.A.A