This was one of the first issues we all got on when we first joined NS. As far as RL is concerned. What's your opinion on compulsory voting? Does it deny an individual's right to self-determination? Or is it a necessary evil?
What's your reasoning?mcmasterdonia:I support compulsory voting.
flemingovia:Sloppy english. Democracy either is or is not. participation in democracy is what is compulsory or not.
Of course, you realise that not participating is a form of participation.flemingovia:Sloppy english. Democracy either is or is not. participation in democracy is what is compulsory or not.
Is there always an option to abstain in the voting process, or are you forced to pick from the candidates available?Amerion:As an Australian, I am fortunate to see the first-hand benifits of compulsive voting, which is a civic duty comparable to other duties we perform such as taxation, compulsory education and jury duty. Compulsive voting teaches the benefits of political participation and reinforces political activism, with Parliament reflecting more accurately the 'will of the electorate'. Governments are forced to consider the total electorate in policy formulation and management.
But how much thought does the electorate give to who they vote for? In Senate elections 98% voters vote "above the line." I'm not saying that's a bad thing, since party discipline is rather tight in Australia; individual candidates may not really matter.Amerion:As an Australian, I am fortunate to see the first-hand benifits of compulsive voting, which is a civic duty comparable to other duties we perform such as taxation, compulsory education and jury duty. Compulsive voting teaches the benefits of political participation and reinforces political activism, with Parliament reflecting more accurately the 'will of the electorate'. Governments are forced to consider the total electorate in policy formulation and management.
There are always exceptions to the assurance of civil rights and liberties. Without compulsory voting not everyone would vote and thus the results would be inaccurate. There must be some mandatory things so the laws work; and at the same time not too much so civil rights are preserved. The perfect democracy can balance mandatory procedures and civil rights to create what I call a "Goldilocks country".Alicia DiLaurentis:I don't really like representative democracy, especially when the politicians are either jerks or idiots. But on the other hand people often don't know what they want. Still, I think democracy is about certain liberty and civil rights, so the entire 'compulsory' idea seems wrong.
Australia uses paper ballots. It's fairly easy to make your ballot paper informal. Most easily, just leave it blank.Bustos:Is there always an option to abstain in the voting process, or are you forced to pick from the candidates available?Amerion:As an Australian, I am fortunate to see the first-hand benifits of compulsive voting, which is a civic duty comparable to other duties we perform such as taxation, compulsory education and jury duty. Compulsive voting teaches the benefits of political participation and reinforces political activism, with Parliament reflecting more accurately the 'will of the electorate'. Governments are forced to consider the total electorate in policy formulation and management.
The United Kingdom have classes called "Personal Development", PSHE, PSME - Physical, Social Health/Morale Education that are mandatory. It could be included into those areas.Nebula:The problem with mandatory politics classes is that it's going to be difficult to keep them from being boring, and as such you're going to see more people skipping the class.