Note that I very explicitly did not say that the Republican Party should or could be outlawed- I noted in my very first post, in fact, that it would practically speaking be impossible to do so without defeating them in a civil war, something which I am not prepared to advocate. This thread was always intended to be a theoretical moral question-do the Republican Party's actions make it a criminal organization-not a how-too guide for overthrowing the government and implementing a radical Leftist dictatorship as some have seemed to treat it.You say that as if your idea won't require such destabilization to even get to the point where it might be feasible... Try a little self-reflection there TRR.
See above reg. the purpose of this thread. Also, you should retract and apologize for such a despicable misrepresentation of my position which, if you have actually read the thread, you must know to be false.My idea is increased voter education, voting by a random sampling of people chosen across all demographics combined with single four-year terms for all elected officials followed by a two-term period where they're barred from any political involvement. Stagger elections so that 25% of all seats are open every year. Toss in a dash of boiling political campaigning down to televised debates and written statements only and you change what makes a politician electable and importantly what makes a politician re-electable.
It's a bit far fetched in that nobody within the current system would support it and there's no easy way to get there from here but it's less evil than your desperate fantasy.
As to the above ideas you propose: one is good, one seems well-meaning but flawed and likely to backfire, one I am largely neutral on, and two are utterly despotic and pointless.
Voter education is absolutely necessary- one cannot make meaningful choices if one is not informed as to ones' options and their potential consequences. Although it does raise the question of who is doing the educating, and what their motives and biases are. This, in part, is why I place such a great importance on freedom of expression and freedom of information.
Single terms sounds nice- we want our officials to be doing their job rather than worrying about getting reelected, right? And no doubt it appeals to those who regard all politicians as inherently corrupt and simply desire change for the sake of change. But it also largely removes the threat of being voted out if you fail to satisfy the voters- and thus actually removes a form of accountability for elected officials. Under this system, a politician could do whatever they wanted during their term, short of a crime, with little fear of suffering major reprecussions to their career. Term limits also are problematic to me because they artificially restrict the choice of the voters, and are therefore to some extent anti-democratic.
Staggering elections... shrug. It increases the rate of turnover, so if your goal is change for the sake of change, I suppose it makes sense. It might also lead to increased election fatigue, and to such rapid turnover that its hard for any but the most short-term policies to ever be enacted. Or it might have very little effect at all.
Having a randomly-selected sample of citizens vote and thereby stripping citizens of the right to one vote per person is anti-democratic. The goal, I assume, is to keep the unwashed masses from voting (ignoring that Trump lost the popular vote and was elected by the Electoral College)… but even that doesn't make sense, because it doesn't actually control who's voting, if its randomized. Please elaborate on this point, because right now it strikes me as both despotic and utterly pointless.
Passing laws limiting what you are allowed to say while campaigning that strictly would, I suspect, be a blatant violation of the First Amendment in the US, and the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in Canada- and also somewhat pointless, as private citizens who were not officially part of the campaign could still say whatever they want. Unless you literally banned all political speech outside of debates and official written statements, which... yeah. That level of censorship is incompatible with any non-authoritarian form of government, and would simply be abused to highly limit opposition speech.
Much of this, in any case, is as you say not practical- indeed I am fairly certain that every single measure you propose beyond the vague "increased voter education" would require a Constitutional Amendment to be legal in the United States. A more viable approach to improve the electoral situation in the US would be to pass stronger protections of voting rights (Democrats will likely do this if they get a majority in both Houses of Congress) and having non-partisan or bi-partisan organizations draw the boundaries of districts to negate gerrymandering (some states are moving to implement such programs I believe), while attempting to nullify the Electoral College (presuming a Constitutional Amendment to eliminate it isn't feasible) but encouraging states to require their electors to vote in accordance with the popular vote (this is a movement that is already underway, and which a number of states have agreed to put into effect as soon as enough states to represent a majority of electors sign on). While also working to nominate Supreme Court Justices who will revisit and overturn Citizens United's absurd ruling that money is speech and that corporations have a right to spend as much of it as they want on politics. All of which is a tall order, but a lot less than what you are proposing.
For Canada... I flat-out dislike the Parliamentary system, which I feel greatly limits voters' options, and gives far too much power to a PM with a majority government. If it were up to me, I'd say Canada should call a Constitutional Convention.
I'm aware. But if 2016 showed anything, it is that election rhetoric has influence across national boundaries in our time.You do realize that I'm not American right? I would like to see the US elect sane officials but I won't suck the Democrats off for being the least smelly turd to make that happen.
Being a likely rapist is not simply a "personal issue". For that matter, neither is perjury. It gives me no pleasure to say this as a Democrat, but the Republicans were right to impeach Bill Clinton, and he should have been convicted and removed from office (even though the Republicans were utter hypocrites who were doing it for entirely the wrong reason).I think that purging people for what are ultimately personal issues is a wrong headed way to go about things. Purge people based on bad plans, bad outcomes, and bad policies rather than due to some scandal. Politics shouldn't be a popularity contest but instead a system by which a nation is run effectively. Yet you want to focus on being the good guy rather than being the effective guy, which is a very different thing.
As to the implication that morality and capability are mutually exclusive concepts- its an old argument, and my positions remains the same. I disagree. Indeed, I would say that a good chunk of the problems we're facing right now in our political culture can be traced back to the idea that morality and ability are contradictory things.