Rebane's Ruminations
July 2013
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A nation ignorant and free, that never was and never shall be.  Thomas Jefferson

George Rebane

Here’s a notion that should set progressive hearts palpitating, perhaps even inducing a case or two of apoplexy.  Should citizens deemed mentally (not physically) incapable of caring for themselves be granted a full franchise in a republican democracy?

In these pages this notion has risen implicitly over the years, and most recently occurred to me again during a thread on food stamps that developed in the comment stream of ‘Mindbending Marijuana’.  There I was asked whether I supported foodstamps, the 80% hidden component that has historically been included in past farm bills, and that was recently excised from the current House version going through Congress.  I repeat an edited version of my reply.



I don't know what it takes to qualify for today's food stamps program. While I support a level of government (collective) financial assistance to individuals, I favor a comprehensive cash payment rather than separate payments for food, healthcare, housing, … . I want the individual to be responsible for spending the welfare money as he sees fit.

For government to determine your needs and allocate your transfer payments for you is more than demeaning in my eyes.  As such, it is also society's judgment on your mental condition.  I feel that if you are incapable of 1) correctly allocating your monies (a mental task) to care for yourself, and 2) remain in a chronic situation in which you are under the care of others, then that should impact your franchise as a citizen in some significant manner. In short, a deficient mentality affects all of one's decisions, and not decisions arbitrarily assigned to be faulty in these domains but perfectly good in those domains.

Over the last forty some years we have witnessed the political purchasing power of welfare in all of its various forms.  The most obvious aspect and one that has a growing momentum is transfer payments that now seeks to have government manage our healthcare needs.  The summary effect of all these ‘benefits’ is the gathering and exploitation of the mendicants who see themselves as the beneficiaries of certain political ideologies and politicians.  I am on record for saying that we have already passed the tipping point on our democracy tilting toward socialism as a waypoint to autocracy.

But let’s consider that I am wrong, that through some restructuring of how we voters choose our representatives we can avoid our apparent fate.  How do we do this?  I suggest that we reconsider the matter of voting franchise and how it might be exercised in our republic.  And for that I pose the following.

Consider the working mother of a contemporary family.  She holds down a respectable job, raises her children, is a functional life partner to her husband, keeps the house and its accounts, volunteers/participates in community activities, and manages to stay up on the issues that affect her community and nation.

Then take someone whom society deems to be sufficiently mentally impaired that they cannot be trusted to manage their own budget, cannot spend appropriate sums for their divers needs like health, housing and food even if the money is given to them, cannot hold a job, and perhaps has other cognitive deficiencies like marginal literacy and comprehensive innumeracy which prevents even a cursory understanding of the issues facing community and country.  In short, society has already put in place structures and organizations that are required to maintain this person from destitution or resorting to crime.  And these funds are doled transfer payments supplied by the likes of the woman described above.

These two people are as different as can be in the sense of how they relate to their source of sustenance.  One is productive and proficient, and the other is existentially inept.  Yet when they enter their respective voting booths, they are deemed by the state to be equal – the inept getter’s vote can and will effectively cancel the provider’s vote.  (We note that we already discriminate in franchising certain kinds of citizens – e.g. children and the institutionalized insane.)

Bryan Caplan described what this kind of equality (as opposed to equality in front of the law) has already brought about in The Myth of the Rational Voter: Why Democracies Choose Bad Policies (2007).  This scholarly work has been assiduously ignored by all public figures of every political stripe.  I offer it again as a starting point in reconsidering the franchise of citizens in a sustainable democratic republic.

[15jul13 update]  Asked to offer my own thoughts on a citizen qualifying for the voting franchise, I offer the following thoughts as a rough starting point in order to invite thoughtful criticism and/or constructive edits.  First a couple of observations –

•    Current suffrage is not universal; we already deny the vote to children, felons, and the institutionally insane, among others.  The under-aged and insane are presumably prohibited because they don’t have the mental capacity to adequately understand and process the information required to make a reasoned decision, and therefore may fall prey to being influenced by others to vote against their best interest, or to amplify another’s vote.
•    The seminal assumption that underelies the vote, is that the voter understands what he’s voting for when he submits his ballot.  In other words, that it is a duly considered statement of freely expressed individual preference.

My nostrums on who should be allowed to vote are conditioned entirely on the second point above – that the voter has the capacity to independently acquire minimal information upon which to base his vote (please note that he doesn't even have to demonstrate such understanding).  And to give greater assurances of that capacity, a set of proxy skills should be demonstrated by the prospective voter before being granted the franchise.  The set of exact requirements, as determined by the several states, should then be based on the following points.

•    Only citizens may vote.
•    The vote shall not be denied any citizen on the basis of race, gender, sexual orientation, educational background, ownership of property, status of wealth/indebtedness, or condition of un/employment.
•    No one institutionalized for mental or criminal reasons (including being on parole) shall be granted suffrage.  However, once being released, full voting privileges will be restored upon passing the applicable literacy/numeracy test described below.
•    Voters shall pass a basic literacy test (similar to drivers’ license tests) before granted suffrage, and periodically (say every ten years) thereafter.  Voters must demonstrate ‘functional literacy’ as defined by the Dept of Education (see NAAL, the longitudinal survey of adult literacy conducted by the National Center for Educational Statistics).  The test shall also include and/or be given within the context of the informational requirements demanded of naturalized citizens as determined by the federal government.
•    Voters shall demonstrate minimal numeracy (‘numerical literacy’) skills in basic arithmetic (add, subtract, multiply, divide) including understanding what is a percentage.  Again see the NCES longitudinal survey.
•    There is no limit to the number of times the test may be taken.
•    The voter eligibility status will be reflected on a person’s driver’s license, state issued ID, or other such commonly carried form of identification that can be presented to poll or voter registration workers (or its PIN entered for online voting or by snail mail).

Thoughts?

Posted in , ,

122 responses to “Equality Questioned (updated 15jul13)”

  1. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    George,
    Food stamps and most of our welfare programs are a symptom of a dysfunctional system. If we had representatives that set the rules/ laws up so people could earn a living wage not by a mandatory living wage level but by incentives of reinvestment of taxing capital at high rates after high marginal threshold, made in the US blue collar manufacturing jobs with import tariffs, basic infrastructure that gives all citizens a chance at some sort of higher education whether it be university or vocational training, return to having modest pensions, universal health care so people aren’t job locked and we could create an innovation boom, and so on.
    The government is not supposed to be an other it is supposed to be us. If it represents the people over special interests we would not need such large scale social welfare programs. But those who own our political parties have never done better while the growing inequality is hitting 80 year highs. So I don’t expect many changes any time soon.
    Isn’t it time to discuss the real issue instead of the symptoms of the issue?

    Like

  2. MikeL Avatar
    MikeL

    Ben,
    Last time I checked all citizens do have have the optioto go to university. While I agree that the social welfare programs are a symptom of a dysfunctional system , I am sure that you would not agree with me that these programs should be sharply curtailed. These programs should only be used to help the truly needy, such as the mentally or physically handicapped people that can not fend for themselves. I also think that if you are receiving such gubnent assistance them you temporarily give up your right to vote, this way those riding the train can not enslave those pulling.
    As far as providing healthcare to all regardless of the ability to pay, I suggest as I have to all good progressives such as yourself, that you personally take on the burden of paying for said healthcare. Just think you could really feel great paying for a hundred or so of the downtrodden and on top of it all you could rid yourself of the overriding hypocracy that most progressives exhibit.

    Like

  3. stevenfrisch Avatar
    stevenfrisch

    “I feel that if you are incapable of 1) correctly allocating your monies (a mental task) to care for yourself, and 2) remain in a chronic situation in which you are under the care of others, then that should impact your franchise as a citizen in some significant manner.” –George Rebane
    And you call yourself a ‘Constitutionalist’?
    It is as if the mechanisms established in the Constitution, a body of laws made by a legislature, the interpretation of that body of law by an independent judiciary, and the power of the Executive to exercise limited independent authority and establish implementation policy, in short all history since the Constitution took effect in March of 1789, is wiped away in one fell swoop.
    The question posed is pure fantasy; akin to asking, “what if the last 223 of history had not occurred?” It is impossible to even take seriously.

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  4. Paul Emery Avatar

    Once again George how do you determining a persons competency to be a voter? Government review board-test-hearing etc? Would it be at a local, State or Federal level? Would there be a right to appeal? Would it the time limit be?
    Until these questions are looked at this is in theory only.

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  5. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    Mike L,
    Give up your right to vote because you are poor. Oh my god what year is this and what country am I living?

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  6. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    Steve and Paul,
    This is why I call George an authoritarian corporatist/ fascist. By the way George, I am not saying it in a derogatory way. I know you like using labels to clarify your positions and so do I.
    Literacy Tests, Poll Taxes, we might as well throw slavery back into the mix and make sure those pesky women, especially in Texas get their votes stripped from them because science has proven the male brain is larger thus more superior. White Christian Property Owning Males are the only ones that can be trusted with the vote. I guess this must make George an original intent kind of guy. I have posted this before and will do it again just for kicks
    Todd Snider at a conservatarian nightmare, The Hardly Strictly in SF. A great story accompanied with a song.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xhnf9x-Jfm4
    Or just the song in animated form
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xhnf9x-Jfm4

    Like

  7. George Rebane Avatar

    I see that the anticipated palpitations are indeed approaching apoplexy.
    When our progressive commenters are finished rolling out their stock outrage and address the question within its posed scope, I will be happy to join the conversation. The problem is real, our inability to deal with it is equally real.

    Like

  8. stevenfrisch Avatar
    stevenfrisch

    There is no apoplexy here; only legitimate questions. How do you square your definition of a ‘productive and proficient’ with a democratic republic that extends the franchise, under established Constitutional law, to the widest possible participants, and who decides who is ‘productive and proficient’? I think that’s a valid question.

    Like

  9. Jeff Pelline Avatar
    Jeff Pelline

    Paul,
    How much money has George’s “astute” commentary raked in for KVMR’s capital campaign? Or better yet how much has it turned away? Back in high school, Mr. Hamshire taught me “All opinions are not created equal.” [JeffP, your occasional droppings really underline that you are out of your league here. I leave this little piece of snark dangling for the record. gjr]

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  10. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    George,
    To borrow a phrase you are fond of, we have gone around this barn before. So lets cut to the chase. You believe that only a small few privileged group should have a say in our representative/ republican government, which means only a small privileged few actually have representation. This is very antiquated thinking George.
    The other thing you have misrepresented Jefferson’s position on education and an enlightened citizenry. Here is a link on a little history of the University of Virginia. http://www.virginia.edu/uvatours/shorthistory/
    Here are some actual quotes from Jefferson that smacks down your opinion and promotes what I mentioned in my first comment. There are plenty more but I think you get the point. Public education for all citizens. Jefferson believed higher education should be eligible to all who are capable for free. That is why he started the University of Virginia.
    1818 August 4. The objects of this primary eduction [university education] determine its character and limits. These objects are To give to every citizen the information he needs for the transaction of his own business; To enable him to calculate for himself, and to express and preserve his ideas, his contracts and accounts, in writing; To improve by reading, his morals and faculties; To understand his duties to his neighbors and country, and to discharge with competence the functions confided to him by either; To know his rights; to exercise with order and justice those he retains; to choose with discretion the fiduciary of those he delegates; and to notice their conduct with diligence, with candor and judgement; And, in general, to observe with intelligence and faithfulness all the social relations under which he shall be placed. To instruct the mass of our citizens in these, their rights, interests and duties, as men and citizens, being then the objects of education in the primary schools, whether privet or public, in them should be taught reading, writing and numerical arithmetic, the elements of mensuration…and the outlines of geography and history.”
    1820 September 28. (to William C. Jarvis)
    “I know no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society, but the people themselves: and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise their controul with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is, not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education. This is the true corrective of abuses of constitutional power.”
    You hard core right wingers drive me nuts with this kind of stuff.

    Like

  11. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    My buddy Ben wrote “White Christian Property Owning Males are the only ones that can be trusted with the vote”. Finally, Mr. Ben hits the nail on the head. Truer words have never been posted by Mr. Ben. Kudos buddy, welcome to the sunny side of the street where you stand taller and smell the sweet fragrance of flowering blooms. Its almost intoxicating.
    There might be a Constitutional issue with Ben’s statement, but then again maybe not. Maybe only property owners can be trusted with the vote. Strike maybe. Property owners can be trusted with the vote for sure, but everybody gets to vote. Even the untrustworthy ones. Not all property owners are white. There are Asians and dark skinned brothers from Africa, Central America and the Caribbean, and even some Black Irish and a couple of Froggies that own US soil. They are mostly trustworthy in exercising the right to vote. Exceptions are the Irish and the French, but if the Irish Americans can stay sober long enough to walk unaided into the voting booth, let them in. Don’t now if the Froggies can be entrusted with making informed decisions in the polling place or anywhere for that matter. Might be some rare exceptions out there. After all this is America and them Frenchies don’t even celebrate Cinco de Mayo. Whatz up with dat? Ok, keep the French-Americans away on election night, whether they own property or not.

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  12. stevenfrisch Avatar
    stevenfrisch

    Posted by: Ben Emery | 13 July 2013 at 09:04 PM
    I am with you brother Ben. The founders would roll over in their graves to hear the ‘ruminations’ of our host. These guys are about the most anti-American bunch ever assembled.

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  13. George Rebane Avatar

    stevenfrisch 840pm – yes, even though “productive and proficient” and “democratic republic” are orthogonal concepts, it is a worthy try at a relevant question.
    Our government already decides who is sufficiently productive not to qualify for transfer payments. And the people who do business with the individual to make him productive do at the same time consider him to be sufficiently proficient. No new bureaucracies are needed. Now where were you going with this point?
    Returning to my invitation for discussion. Many wiser heads than mine, including our Founders, have written and taught us over the centuries that democracies destroy themselves when the majority discovers that it can vote itself the wealth of the remaining minority. I and many other Americans believe we are firmly on that road now. My post asks if there is anything to be done about that and suggests that a re-examination of the voting franchise could be a useful starting point.
    If your answer is NO, then you take yourself out of the discussion, for all you have left is to dun me for bringing up the subject, which rapidly becomes boring.

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  14. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    George,
    When the founders stated those opinions there were no democracies on the planet only tyrannical kingdoms that had subjects not citizens. The US made the crazy jump to having citizens who would participate in the decision making of the laws they were to live under.

    Like

  15. Michael Anderson Avatar
    Michael Anderson

    George claimed:
    “Many wiser heads than mine, including our Founders, have written and taught us over the centuries that democracies destroy themselves when the majority discovers that it can vote itself the wealth of the remaining minority.”
    Yes they did, which kept the Negro from substantially voting for almost 200 years. I know that going back to those bad old days is NOT what you are calling for. But I ask you to seriously consider what it IS that you are calling for, and other respondents so far have already posited that your “tests” will always be unwieldy and repressive, no matter how hard you try to make them fair.
    If the Great Divide happens, it will happen with the south attempting to secede once again. But it isn’t happening in a million fucking years in California, the world’s 7th largest economic powerhouse, so I’d like to hear more about what you have in store for us locally.
    But I would like for you to look at another angle. How about the rich folks who, according to Citizens United vs. FEC, are accorded the ability to “vote itself the wealth of the remaining minority” as well? Don’t these two shitty situations cancel each other out?
    If you say they don’t, we will need to “run our horse around that barn” a few times, since I can quote fact and figure as to why a filthy rich silver spoon in Westchester County has a lot more votes than I do, and that this incontrovertible fact pisses me off to no end. Have you ever met a bond broker from Westchester County? They all have more votes than you or me, every one. But I speak as a 5th generation west coast pioneer, whose family has received multi-generational abuse from east coast silver spoons for over 120 years. I would not expect a one-generation American from Estonia to understand any of this unless he had done extensive research on the subject.
    George incorrectly predicted:
    “I and many other Americans believe we are firmly on that road now.”
    Sorry bud, we are on no such road. Your wavery Estonian glasses have given you one of the most incorrect views of what is going on in the world regarding socialism that I think I may have ever read. Call me when Denmark falls.
    George offered:
    “My post asks if there is anything to be done about that and suggests that a re-examination of the voting franchise could be a useful starting point.”
    As I stated, it would NOT be a useful starting point. It would be a disaster. However, I have an article for you to read that I think you might find interesting. Read it hear: http://www.alternet.org/south-dragging-rest-nation-down?akid=10653.6940.cYrfs1&rd=1&src=newsletter864267&t=9&paging=off
    The sad fact is, the south will leave before you do. Are you moving to Alabama anytime soon?
    Michael A.

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  16. stevenfrisch Avatar
    stevenfrisch

    Posted by: George Rebane | 13 July 2013 at 10:24 PM
    “My post asks if there is anything to be done about that and suggests that a re-examination of the voting franchise could be a useful starting point.
    If your answer is NO, then you take yourself out of the discussion, for all you have left is to dun me for bringing up the subject, which rapidly becomes boring.”
    Seriously George, your questions original premise is flawed; the people who take public assistance AS YOU DEFINE IT, are not the only ones who could be considered not to be ‘productive and proficient’. My contention would be that there are a lot of defense contractors, corporate tax break recipients, agricultural subsidy recipients, and recipients of home mortgage deductions, who would qualify as failing the ‘productive and proficient’ test in my book.
    Thus the question becomes ‘who decides’.
    My basic point is that the whole theory behind a democratic republic is that it encourages full participation and the extension of the franchise to the widest possible group of people possible. If your contention is that our republic is founded on the idea of maintaining the franchise to a narrower set of participants, then you are ignoring the last 223 years of American history. That’s why I contend that the entire question is nothing but an Ayn Rand ‘conservatarian’ fantasy akin to ideological masturbation.

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  17. George Rebane Avatar

    BenE 1113pm – I don’t understand the point you are making.
    stevenfrisch 640am – A wider reading would inform you that it is neither my nor your definition of public assistance, but the government’s and that of the broad school of economists who calculate transfer payments when compiling the GDP which then the government reports.
    Your aggregating defense contractors as being among the unproductive and inept is also at odds with the government’s assessment. Many, including our historical enemies, believe that our defense contractors have provided the country with kick-ass weaponry unparalleled in human history, but your bringing that into the discussion is revealing.
    My readings of the Founders also supports that they intended to extend “the franchise to the widest group of people (citizens) possible.” I don’t know what you meant by “full participation”, a notion foreign to both Founders and the Constitution they gave.
    The only concern that the Founders had with the franchise was the wisdom of the voter as evinced by, say, Jefferson and also Franklin’s famous “a republic if you can keep it” quotes. It is, of course, the goal of any representative government seeking long-term stability to extend the franchise of its citizens to the widest latitudes possible, and I fully promote that.
    Seeing the dire direction that the country is taking as corroborated not only by the Right but also by the Left (see truthout.com anticipating and calling for revolution) and even our own BenE, the question I raise seems to invite sober reflection. Why? because what we are doing is apparently all proper and legal. After all, is it not we, all of us together, who sent those bozos to capitols, state houses, and county administration centers to wield the power and guide us to where we are?
    Although I am admirably credited with introducing all these outlandish thoughts, there are many others in the land who have been similarly concerned. I cited Bryan Caplan, who may be accused to view the political landscape through his Jewish glasses, as just one well expressed example. That has drawn a chorus of crickets.

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  18. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Thomas Jefferson’s view was that the citizenry must be informed and educated on matters to a certain degree to safeguard against our leaders and preserve the Constitution and our Republic for which it stands.
    An educated citizenry is the best medicine, rather than taking the right to vote away from the dumb shats. Which brings up another dilemma, aka, the output of our public education system.
    http://tcfir.org/opinion/Thomas%20Jefferson%20on%20Educating%20the%20People.pdf
    There are too many quotes here to copy, so read it if you so desire.

    Like

  19. fish Avatar
    fish

    George,
    Oh my…it’s like the “monkeys in the kitchen” scene from charming 90’s file “Jumanji” this morning.
    This thread provides ample evidence that political thought only devolves….what a wonderful example of entropy.

    Like

  20. stevenfrisch Avatar
    stevenfrisch

    It may surprise you George, since you have a propensity to define anyone who does not agree with you as an illiterate innumerate boob, but I read Caplan’s article when it came out in 2007, and have used it several times as an example of oversimplifying the tension between markets and democracy.
    “What economists currently see as the optimal balance between markets and government rests upon an overestimate of the virtues of democracy. In many cases, economists should embrace the free market in spite of its defects, because it still outshines the democratic alternative.”–Caplan, The Myth of the Rational Voter
    With all due respect, falling back on the defense that you are merely following the governments definition of what makes up a ‘transfer payment’ when your core point is that the government is both inept and incapable of making rational choices in allocating transfer payments, is internally inconsistent with your argument. It also conveniently ignores your history here of defining as transfers of wealth (subsidies) or transfer payments many of the same things I did.
    I used the military industrial complex as an example because it is the business you were in for many years, and since you and others here routinely define my business as being blood-sucking, rent seeking collectivism, I wanted to highlight your own history of living off the government transfer payment teat and the largess of the American taxpayer.
    If “It is, of course, the goal of any representative government seeking long-term stability to extend the franchise of its citizens to the widest latitudes possible, and I fully promote that” then how do you square the proposal to limit the franchise to only those someone would deem to be ‘smart’ voters? You have consistently failed to answer the question, here or on the other thread, of who would determine who is a smart voter.
    I for one do not “overestimate the virtues of democracy”, nor do I seek to elevate markets based on the idea that they “outshine the democratic alternative”. My basic contention here is that these ideas are anathema to the founding principles of the United States, and that they once again serve to illustrate that for all your self proclaimed ‘Americanism’, your ideas are really quite alien.
    By the way, in the interest of educating readers, Caplan’s article can be found here:
    http://www.cato.org/sites/cato.org/files/pubs/pdf/pa594.pdf

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  21. stevenfrisch Avatar
    stevenfrisch

    “I cited Bryan Caplan, who may be accused to view the political landscape through his Jewish glasses, as just one well expressed example.”–George Rebane
    Has someone accused Mr. Caplan as having ‘jewish glasses’?
    Funny, the idea that Mr. Caplan might be Jewish never even crossed my mind.

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  22. fish Avatar
    fish

    I for one do not “overestimate the virtues of democracy”, nor do I seek to elevate markets based on the idea that they “outshine the democratic alternative”.
    Careful Steve….you’re going to throw out that shoulder again with the vigorous patting of yourself on the back!

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  23. stevenfrisch Avatar
    stevenfrisch

    Fish, perhaps you should stop for a second and consider exactly what George is saying here:
    1) That democracy’s flaw is that voters are stupid
    2) That a more market based society and less popular sovereignty is the preferred alternative.
    3) And [from another thread] that the voting franchise should be limited based on who are ‘productive and proficient’ and who some undefined group defines as not ‘productive and proficient’.
    I find it odd that people would so mistrust government that they would contend that it is incapable of governing [as evidenced by the moniker at the top of this page declaring presumably the last century as ‘the last great century of man’] yet trust government to define the ‘takers’ and the ‘givers’.
    Don’t you see the inherent internal inconsistency of this argument?

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  24. L Avatar
    L

    How about we just have elgible voters take and pass the same test that a legal immigrant is required to pass when he or she becomes a citizen. Flunk it, you go back and study until you can pass; then you vote.

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  25. George Rebane Avatar

    L 1041am – the first real contribution to this post. Whether acceptable or not, your proposition does move the discussion ahead.
    stevenfrisch 930am – you may have missed your thought partner’s 115am citing of the problems caused by my “wavery Estonian glasses”

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  26. fish Avatar
    fish

    Don’t you see the inherent internal inconsistency of this argument?
    Yes. Again Steve try not to self congratulate so much.
    I find it odd that people would so mistrust government that they would contend that it is incapable of governing [as evidenced by the moniker at the top of this page declaring presumably the last century as ‘the last great century of man’] yet trust government to define the ‘takers’ and the ‘givers’.
    I suppose it could be as simple as that percentage of the citizenry who contribute more in taxes than they consume could be allowed the franchise. The only problem is that the government in which you have placed so much trust has incurred a debt so large that that would permit an eligible voting pool that might fit comfortably in a standard sized school bus.

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  27. George Rebane Avatar

    Stevenfrisch 922am – Thanks for the comprehensive and illustrative reply. I believe it to be an excellent example of why it’s so difficult for you to advance the debate over the points raised on RR. In these exchanges you primarily seek to debate with yourself, ascribing words to your counterpart and then deconstructing them. Let’s take a look; your remarks follow with my remarks in square brackets.

    It may surprise you George, since you have a propensity to define anyone who does not agree with you as an illiterate innumerate boob, but I read Caplan’s article when it came out in 2007, and have used it several times as an example of oversimplifying the tension between markets and democracy. [Those are your words not mine. I happen to agree with Caplan and others that voters as a group are irrational, as are the collectivist ideologies and their apologetics arrayed in the comment streams here.]
    “What economists currently see as the optimal balance between markets and government rests upon an overestimate of the virtues of democracy. In many cases, economists should embrace the free market in spite of its defects, because it still outshines the democratic alternative.”–Caplan, The Myth of the Rational Voter
    With all due respect, falling back on the defense that you are merely following the governments definition of what makes up a ‘transfer payment’ when your core point is that the government is both inept and incapable of making rational choices in allocating transfer payments, is internally inconsistent with your argument. It also conveniently ignores your history here of defining as transfers of wealth (subsidies) or transfer payments many of the same things I did. [I have ‘defended’ nothing, but merely answered your previous question about ‘who decides’. You have misunderstood and misstated my “core point”. And I have not increased the scope of the government’s definition of transfer payments when it comes to supporting your professional efforts; they are what they are.]
    I used the military industrial complex as an example because it is the business you were in for many years, and since you and others here routinely define my business as being blood-sucking, rent seeking collectivism, I wanted to highlight your own history of living off the government transfer payment teat and the largess of the American taxpayer. [Calling the sums paid to defense contractors as derived from “the government transfer payment teat” is longstanding collectivist attribution. Neither the government, nor any other ideological cohort in the land defines these monies as transfer payments – it is merely an established part of the leftwing’s redoubt when reasoned argument fails.]
    If “It is, of course, the goal of any representative government seeking long-term stability to extend the franchise of its citizens to the widest latitudes possible, and I fully promote that” then how do you square the proposal to limit the franchise to only those someone would deem to be ‘smart’ voters? You have consistently failed to answer the question, here or on the other thread, of who would determine who is a smart voter. [Your auto-debate continues. I have proposed no requirement for voters to be ‘smart’, and it is a question that you have not asked before. I did attempt to answer your query about who decides adequate levels of productivity and proficiency that you misinterpreted as my minimum standards for the voter franchise.]
    I for one do not “overestimate the virtues of democracy”, nor do I seek to elevate markets based on the idea that they “outshine the democratic alternative”. My basic contention here is that these ideas are anathema to the founding principles of the United States, and that they once again serve to illustrate that for all your self-proclaimed ‘Americanism’, your ideas are really quite alien. [First, I’m not at all sure that you have understood very many of the ideas I have presented, since your attempts to rephrase them almost always totally change their intended meaning (purposefully or unintentionally?) as also evinced by the comments of other readers. And for the record, you constantly come across as the final arbiter of who is/not an American, and are the first person in my life to ever have doubted the authenticity of my Americanism, as these pages attest. And your belief that “these ideas are anathema (“alien”) to the founding principles of the United States” does no credit to your reading of history and contemporary commentary on our body politic. Nevertheless, your assiduous representation here as an exemplar of progressive thought and intellect is deeply appreciated.]

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  28. Paul Emery Avatar

    George
    Can you give us an idea of the ways and means you would implement your ideas expressed in this post? How would it be done? Testing, some judical proceeding. State, Federal local or all of the above……… ????

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  29. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    Everyone the premise their should be some kind of poll tax is a very regressive approach. I kind of got sidetracked below so I will finish my point here. Republicans have at least half the blame for the lack of civics in our nation as do the Democrats. Once again we have a duopoly or one party tyranny with the illusion perpetuated by corporate media that we have an actual choice. When for a decade congress has an 85% or greater disapproval rating no matter what party controls it tells us we there is a major dysfunction going on in a democratic republic.
    I am fast to criticize the Democratic Party because they play the role, very poorly in my opinion, of the party of the people in this dysfunctional government to the highest bidder. Whether liberals not progressives want to admit it or not the Democratic Party are willing to participants whole heartedly in this system. Doesn’t anyone find it odd the Democrats haven’t said a peep about the “war on voting” since the election? Meanwhile ALEC written legislation is continuously being proposed at the state level all over the nation restricting voting for predominately democratic voting blocks. Just like the Republican Party the D’s have their go to issues to get out the vote.
    Republicans- Guns, God, Gays, Abortion
    Democrats- Voting, Abortion, Environment, Marriage Equality (Biden screwed the pooch when he forced the D’s to play that trump card and as we are seeing the country is moving very quickly in that direction)
    Both parties when they sit in secure majorities while controlling the executive branch usually do squat on these issues because they need them to show the difference between the part
    ies come election season.

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  30. George Rebane Avatar

    PaulE 144pm – Great question Paul, but I hope that you haven’t been bamboozled by SteveF and BenE in their efforts to attribute to me their misconstruction of this post. I invited a discussion on the merits of some painfully obvious inequalities among America’s franchised voters that could (should?) inform a revised voting franchise to benefit the nation. Beyond that, I have expressed no ideas for a solution.
    Nevertheless and as I anticipated, all of the liberal responses have been the usual lambasting the messenger and attributing to him all the usual black marks for bringing up the notion. The only contribution so far has come from L’s 1048am.
    What are your thoughts on the matter? BTW, a valid response would be to conclude that we should leave things as they are, the republic will do just fine with an ever growing fraction of voters ignorant of the issues, candidates, and pretty much everything else (per Bryan Caplan). On this I also refer you to historian David McCullough’s recent interview on CBS.
    http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-18560_162-57591393/journey-through-history-with-david-mccullough/
    Applicable quotes from there by McCulloug, “We are raising children today in America who are historically illiterate.” “We need to revamp the teaching of the teachers.” Given the venue, the gentlemanly scholar was being too kind.

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  31. Paul Emery Avatar

    George
    My initial thoughts are that such a system has much more potential for abuse than what we have. Imagine the political influence on setting up the criteria for voting. I was hoping you would have some ideas about ways and means because it was your idea to discuss this. I am reminded of Paul Goodmans famous quote that a “community has as much deviant behavior as it deserves.” Thats not very comforting but it is inclusive of the situation.
    I could, for example, take great exception for example in allowing certain Christians, Islamic and other religious groups making political judgements for me when in their view life on this earth is just a stepping stone to some eternal bliss for the believers or hell for the non believers. That totally effects their view of the world and I’m not sure I would feel comfortable with that if we were setting up a criteria for voting. . In your view how does that fit in the mix?

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  32. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    In the constitution of Spain as proposed by Cortes, there was a principle entirely new to me: … that no
    person born after that day should ever acquire the right
    s of citizenship until he could read and write. It is
    impossible sufficiently to estimate the wisdom of this
    provision. Of all those which have been thought of for
    securing fidelity in the administration of the governm
    ent, constant reliance to the principles of the
    constitution, and progressive amendments with the pr
    ogressive advances of the human mind or changes in
    human affairs, it is the most effectual.
    –Thomas Jefferson to Pierre Samuel Dupont de Nemours, 1816.

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  33. George Rebane Avatar

    PaulE 343pm – agree with you on keeping religionists out of selecting voters.
    And also agree that any proposed new system that bases the franchise on merits does have a good chance of being abused. But I am among those who feel that our current system is already abused. As with many other things in the public forum that don’t work, we remain silent about the operation of our voting franchise. The conversations that I overhear and have with conservatives consists almost all complaints, and few alternative proposals. Most certainly it is also topic too painfully hot to handle by conservatives as we can see how many of them have leaped in here help things out. But then, as you so slyly point out, it’s up to me to express the deviant behavior and provide a forum for such issues. I don’t think RR has a reputation for sticking with the easy ones.
    I am challenged by your invitation for me to propose some approaches that would make a “corporatist/autocrat” (did I get that right?) lick his chops.

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  34. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    George,
    I think my position on the topic is pretty clear. I reject discussing the issue on a public forum giving the idea merit. In a one on one situation or small private group just for philosophical discussions fine but to even consider the idea as legitimate is way over any line I can cross.

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  35. George Rebane Avatar

    BenE 948pm – Since you won’t tag the comment you’re referring to, I have no idea what you’re rejecting here.

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  36. stevenfrisch Avatar
    stevenfrisch

    Posted by: George Rebane | 14 July 2013 at 11:36 PM
    Hey George, I think Ben is referring to disenfranchising voters based on a property ownership, or ‘recipient’ of public largess, or literacy and numeracy test.
    As the final arbiter of what “Americanism’ is I would say Ben is rejecting your misunderstanding of American founding principles.

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  37. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    George,
    Responding to your 14 July 2013 at 03:21 PM comment.
    My response to comment.
    “I think my position on the topic is pretty clear. I reject discussing the issue on a public forum giving the idea merit. In a one on one situation or small private group just for philosophical discussions fine but to even consider the idea as legitimate is way over any line I can cross.”
    Posted by: Ben Emery | 14 July 2013 at 09:48 PM
    The idea of having what amounts to a poll tax (burdens to the poor)levied onto registered voters to have the right to participate in our nations laws, rules, and regulations is an outrageous unconstitutional assault on the ideals of what the Declaration Of Independence and what has become the US Constitution through the movements that has increased democracy throughout our history.

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  38. George Rebane Avatar

    BenE 905am – You did have me confused (maybe I still am) about your position. If you’re reluctant to discuss this or any other issue on RR of your disliking, why not just remain silent?

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  39. Todd Juvinall Avatar

    Hey what did I miss?

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  40. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    George 15 July 2013 at 09:37 AM,
    “Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.” —Martin Luther King Jr.
    To allow the conversation to go on like it was legitimate and something worth exploring was just unacceptable for me.
    As I have stated here before. I come to RR to give an alternative opinion/ perception to your opinions and discussions for those who might visit but do not participate. Many people have asked how can I stand commenting here? They read what people are saying but would never consider inserting themselves into the conversation.
    There is nothing personally to be gained in our back and forth. Early on I thought there might be and tried to move the conversations towards some kind of solution dialogue but was berated and insulted constantly. So what is the point. So I started coming here to put out my opinions and to challenge the so called “conservatives” in their philosophies and ass backwards worldviews.

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  41. Ben Emery Avatar
    Ben Emery

    Here is another great Martin Luther King Jr speech. I am pretty sure this speech was on April 4, 1967 exactly one year before his assassination.
    Silence Is Betrayal
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z4T0Yq_fYjY

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  42. George Rebane Avatar

    Update – Being asked to give my own thoughts on how the voting franchise should be revised, I have offered a more detailed outline in the 15jul13 update to this post. As always, I invite a critique and/or edits of the ideas presented. And I do recognize that there are many readers who abhor any changes to today’s voter requirements save, perhaps, relaxing them even more.

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  43. George Rebane Avatar

    BenE 1126am – Ben, your suffering and sacrifice is duly noted, and should be doubly appreciated by your fellow ideologues. And those of us whom you regularly astound are equally grateful for your comments.

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  44. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    Property owners only on voting. No one in a union or on a government check should be able to vote. There, that is the answer to our problems. Oh, a a photo ID is required.

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  45. fish Avatar
    fish

    So I started coming here to put out my opinions and to challenge the so called “conservatives” in their philosophies and ass backwards worldviews.
    Good to see that the “healing” has begun.

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  46. Paul Emery Avatar

    Todd 11:44
    Are you being serious or sarcastic? Can I quote you on this in the future?
    Let’s see, cops and fireman and schoolteachers can’t vote right? Renters can’t vote. Unless you state otherwise I’ll take this as your position.

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  47. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    PaulE, you are too much. Of course I am being sarcastic. All Americans should vote. LOL!

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  48. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    Reading the update of George’s ideas on what should be required I have this opinion. I would suggest that all children in school be taught to read, write and do math (including percentages) and there should be a test every year in their grade. By the time they are a senior in High School they should have been washed sufficiently with the knowledge of voting. There should not be a test for anyone after that except for legal immigrants.
    I would also include in the yearly curriculum of the education system the washing of our founding documents, what they mean and the life stories of our Founders. The Revolution and Civil War too. Those items could be inj a civics class, history class or social studies. Every student should pass a test on the documents, write a term paper every year on each Amendment and have “comprehensive” retainment of what they write. More to follow.
    For PaulE, what do you think about that? Or should I get your attention by stating that only landowning males should vote? LOL!

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  49. Paul Emery Avatar

    Todd
    In regards to curriculum for schools in your view should that be determined by the county, state of federal school juristictions ?

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  50. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    I don’t care.

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