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Edited on Sun Sep-14-03 01:44 PM by Charlls
The axis viewpoint which separates world into left and right is a way to oversimplify the problem, reducing both to a given color, or side (this is a neo-con, this is right-wing, this is left-wing, this is a commie, etc). Thats bs. Thats an excellent example how relevant info is removed and cleansed, until we have a completely harmless, aseptic, politically correct, empty and useless statement. The right side argues that the state (political power) should not try to limit or control the economicals powers (the corporative freedoms), but these can mess with the political power thru the lobbyist activity. The left side argues that the state should limit and control the corporate freedoms, and offer basic services. Deciding if a society must be either Pol Pot's camboya or a Imperialist industrial complex is as relevant as deciding the color and texture of the rope that is going to hang me
So all viable societies must lie in "something" in between; the question is, ¿Who has the word to decide where the "in-between" point lies?
What most of the people wants is a equilibrium point between the political and economical power. However its currently impossible for a very simple reason: the 'dollar' travels effortlessly thru the free market economy. the capitalist system relates 'dolar' as the unit of economical power. the stock market rules establish clearly that 'dolars' should have equals rights to compete for buying and selling stocks, which means capital its dinamical in a capitalist society, However, the 'vote' isnt dynamic at all in current pseudo-democratic societies; the democratic systems assures 'vote' as the unit of political power. It says you can offer your 'vote' to the political stocks (politicians) that offer in exchange to satisfy your demands. However (here is the gotcha) its removed the ability of my 'vote' to be withdrawed when a politician doesnt satisfy my demands, and give it freely to other politician. Until we not reach that equilibrium point, societies will strive between the 'ideal' pure forms, or between artificial equilibrium point defined up to the taste of barely movable politicians that cannot be well punished or awarded by the voters, meanwhile, big corporations continue to evolve at a day-to-day pace, and continue to predate the political enviroment (citizens freedoms) A system with these features, would achieve political and economical equilibrium at the same time, so the maniqueist idea of "left" and "right" will become an ill-posed problem
Democracies in a capitalist society only can be assured thru a continuous election system.
I see a electoral system where people can go any time of the year, and change their vote from a candidate to another; let it be a congressman, let it be the president. When that vote update occurs, the previous supported candidate drops by one, and the new supported increases by one. Whoever candidate with the biggest mayority of voters supporting him is the one in charge. People right now CANNOT WITHDRAW ITS VOTE, and since Politicians know this, they only focus in obtaining the charge, thru the help of the Media Machine and Campaign propaganda, and they leave completely aside the actual implementation of their proposals.
With a continuous election system, Campaign will become also continuous, but it will slowly sink in the ambient noise of the mainstream advertisement.
Politicians will know that there are no "coming" elections, that if they want electors to move their asses and change/update their electoral support, they must really convince them there is a good reason for doing that.
Politicians will stop giving for granted their jobs, since electors can go any time of the year and remove them their support. the hegemony of the bipartidism would stop being rigid; small parties could grow their support slowly but progressively, given they manage to gain the simpathy of those disconform with bipartidism formulas.
Vote support will drift dinamically, just as currently does Nasdaq, but now politicians would know, that is not enough to get power.
The most important part will be to keep it
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