Mikey wrote:
All of which is simply rhetoric to couch the message "You must be an idiot because you disagree with me." You still fail to realize the most pertinent fact: I critically considered what you proposed, and I still disagree. It's a fact of life; it's going to happen that people will disagree with you. Trust me, if you accept that fact, you will be a much happier person in life. Claiming that I refused to consider your proposition simply because I disagree with you is not only untrue, it is baseless. The fact of the matter is that you haven't provided any argument compelling enough to convince me of your rectitude.
No. I have problem on the fact that you simply based your entire rebutal on what you "feel" is fair, that the rich people don't deserves more power. It's a neat little opinion to have, but I wasn't fishing for nicely universally accepted truths. I was fishing for actual arguments as to how it might be detrimental to a society, and you just get stuck on "duh, it's bad!".
I am not specifically interested in seeing such a plutocracy system established, if you (wrongly) believe I am advocating such measure. I am specifically interested in seeing the application of additional unfair representation mixed with a universal democracy of the like we see in the U.S.. If you are interested in throwing an alternative line in the philosophical pond by proposing another electoral philosophy, I'd be happy to try to discuss it.
Here is an other one: what is we had 50 representatives, split between ethnical groups. So you would have a mix of 10 Blacks, 10 whites, 10 Latinos, 10 Asians, 10 Natives. Each elected by their constituants to represent their interest.
(It's a terrible idea, I am aware of that. But the point of this discussion, which I drew out of my rant about Canada's Senate, was to actually consider alternatives to our current system, which I don't find optimal).