caspian wrote:Ludwig wrote:emordnilap wrote:
Don't worry, someone voted on your behalf.
Nicely put. Not voting for the least bad is effectively a vote for the worst.
It's nothing of the sort. What if you don't believe in democracy as a tool to change society for the better? (Or at least our bizarrely undemocratic version of democracy.) Should you participate in a system that you believe is corrupt and useless? If so, why?
You participate in the system whether you like it or not, unless you're living self-sufficiently on a Scottish island. You have to live with the consequences of how other people vote.
To say our system is corrupt and useless is just facile. What does that make the system in Zimbabwe? Why does everything have to be absolute in your world? I.e. if the system doesn't work absolutely perfectly, it should be abolished (in favour of what, I'm not entirely clear).
To take an example of what I meant: if, in my constituency, there was a close two-party contest between the Tories and the BNP, I would vote Tory, because though I don't believe in much of what they stand for, I do believe in some such things, like parliamentary democracy and not stoking up irrational hatred of foreigners.
Your argument seems to be that our system couldn't possibly be worse, in which case you really should learn about what goes on in most of the developing world, or Russia, or Italy, or indeed America.
Yes I think we're more stuffed than most by PO, yes our economy was mismanaged, but the whole point of democracy is that when our politicians f*** up they can be brought to task.
Clearly totalitarianism has the advantage that the Government doesn't have to be answerable to the myopic, self-interested demands of the people, but surely you can see that non-answerability makes corruption among politicians worse, not better.
"We're just waiting, looking skyward as the days go down / Someone promised there'd be answers if we stayed around."