Question Time
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- Kaylee
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hee hee I giggled my way through most of it, a few good zingers at Blair but mostly nothing unusual. imo:
Kennedy- nice guy, positive sounding ideas but in the end inconsequential due to our voting system.
Howard- doom-mongering Daily Mail inspired waffle.
Blair- still trying to play the "I'm a nice guy and do what's best!" despite the fact patently nobody believed a word he said and had precious little patience for his policies.
Thoughts from anyone else who watched it?
{And i attached a poll for the sake of something to do...}
Kennedy- nice guy, positive sounding ideas but in the end inconsequential due to our voting system.
Howard- doom-mongering Daily Mail inspired waffle.
Blair- still trying to play the "I'm a nice guy and do what's best!" despite the fact patently nobody believed a word he said and had precious little patience for his policies.
Thoughts from anyone else who watched it?
{And i attached a poll for the sake of something to do...}
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- Smart Mouthed Rodent
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I only saw it from part-way through Howard's bit. I agree with your assessment of how both he and Blair came across. I'm currently intending to vote Lib Dem. However, ff there was a green candidate in my constituency, then I might well be voting for them instead.
Incidentally, I came across this nice little questionaire at http://www.politicalsurvey2005.com/ - it shows where you are on the political spectrum, and which party's supporters you most agree with. (NB, this is showing how well you fit the party's supporters, which doesn't necessarily mean how well you support the party itself).
I came out as:
Crime and punishment, internationalism
Your position on this axis is -5.0
You are likely to be fairly internationalist and rehabilitationist.
Economics, etc
Your position on this axis is -2.2
You are likely to be fairly socialist and anti-war.
Incidentally, I came across this nice little questionaire at http://www.politicalsurvey2005.com/ - it shows where you are on the political spectrum, and which party's supporters you most agree with. (NB, this is showing how well you fit the party's supporters, which doesn't necessarily mean how well you support the party itself).
I came out as:
Crime and punishment, internationalism
Your position on this axis is -5.0
You are likely to be fairly internationalist and rehabilitationist.
Economics, etc
Your position on this axis is -2.2
You are likely to be fairly socialist and anti-war.
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- Kaylee
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I got
Crime and punishment, internationalism
Your position on this axis is -3.1
You are likely to be fairly internationalist and rehabilitationist.
Economics, etc
Your position on this axis is 1.2
You are likely to be slightly free-market and pro-war.
However some of the questions are loaded and too simplistic. And considering one of them was "Do you think the UK was right to go to war in Iraq?" and I answered strongly in the negative how did it decide I was likely to be pro-war?
Crime and punishment, internationalism
Your position on this axis is -3.1
You are likely to be fairly internationalist and rehabilitationist.
Economics, etc
Your position on this axis is 1.2
You are likely to be slightly free-market and pro-war.
However some of the questions are loaded and too simplistic. And considering one of them was "Do you think the UK was right to go to war in Iraq?" and I answered strongly in the negative how did it decide I was likely to be pro-war?
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- Smart Mouthed Rodent
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The two measurements are roughly where you stand on a particular spectrum of opinion. They've identified free market ideas with pro-war ideas, so you must have answered a fair number of questions in a pro-free-market way.Karl Lynch wrote:However some of the questions are loaded and too simplistic. And considering one of them was "Do you think the UK was right to go to war in Iraq?" and I answered strongly in the negative how did it decide I was likely to be pro-war?
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- Kaylee
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I gathered that, I don't understand why they consider the two options mutually exclusive. I'm generally considered a libertarian, I support free trade and the free market as well as a small state which serves mainly only to protect the rights of the individual. I just don't like generalisations, I get enough of them with my car insurance.
"Your a man, you're premium must be higher!"
Why?
"Because men have more costly accidents, it's a fact!"
I've never had an accident, you're applying an unfair generalisation to me because I do not fit the generalisation.
I must be able to sue for sexism or something...
"Your a man, you're premium must be higher!"
Why?
"Because men have more costly accidents, it's a fact!"
I've never had an accident, you're applying an unfair generalisation to me because I do not fit the generalisation.
I must be able to sue for sexism or something...
- Best First
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- Best First
- King of the, er, Kingdom.
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- Best First
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- Smart Mouthed Rodent
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I think it's because there's a big correlation between the two points of view in the electorate as a whole. Anti-war correlates strongly with left-wing economics, and pro-war correlates strongly with right-wing economics.Karl Lynch wrote:I gathered that, I don't understand why they consider the two options mutually exclusive. I'm generally considered a libertarian, I support free trade and the free market as well as a small state which serves mainly only to protect the rights of the individual. I just don't like generalisations, I get enough of them with my car insurance.
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- Smart Mouthed Rodent
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No, pro-war and free-market define the second axis, whilst the first axis is defined by internationalism and rehabilitationism - basically views that go together very often.Rebis wrote:So, although they've portrayed the two axes as being perpendicular to each other, the truth is they are probably nearer to being parallel?
At least spoil your ballot paper rather than not bothering with the election at all.Jetfire wrote:I doubt I'll actually be bothered to vote. Actually only to reduce the Labour majority so Blair doesn't continue to run riot for another 5 years.
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- Jetfire
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For what?
I want a right to a "no vote" option. I think elections should be so important that we call a bank holiday and everybody has to vote. I believe in Australia everybody ;egally has top vote.
I intend to vote, if only that labour must get their majority reduced and Torie policies on Education and Crime (if nothing else) are spot on ideads to improve things IMO.
I want a right to a "no vote" option. I think elections should be so important that we call a bank holiday and everybody has to vote. I believe in Australia everybody ;egally has top vote.
I intend to vote, if only that labour must get their majority reduced and Torie policies on Education and Crime (if nothing else) are spot on ideads to improve things IMO.
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- Kaylee
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I think that the proportion of votes should be taken out of the whole voting population, not just those who voted.
So rather than saying Labout got 40% of the vote, we should include everyone who didn't vote so they only got about 20%. Then on those terms we say a. unless we get at least a 70% turnout the vote is invalid and b. unless one party gets more than 50% of the vote (i.e. an actual majority) they have to form a coalition and produce policies which are a compromise rather than one minority party getting its own way.
So rather than saying Labout got 40% of the vote, we should include everyone who didn't vote so they only got about 20%. Then on those terms we say a. unless we get at least a 70% turnout the vote is invalid and b. unless one party gets more than 50% of the vote (i.e. an actual majority) they have to form a coalition and produce policies which are a compromise rather than one minority party getting its own way.
- Kaylee
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Simply, yes imo.Rebis wrote:And what happens if we get a less than 70% turnout? A re-vote? And if that is <70%? Vote again? What if there's never a 70+% turnout? What then? vote infinitum?Karl Lynch wrote:unless we get at least a 70% turnout the vote is invalid
I don't believe a government should be elected unless what imo is a reasonable portion of the country actually vote. In fact make it mandatory and you solve the problem.
So, there's a possiblity, that there could be 'vote infinitum'. Surely that would be detrimental, in the long run? And armed with that knowledge, surely that would encourage some groups not to vote?
How would you enforce mandatory voting, btw? Employ the Vote Police to frogmarch every voter to a polling booth?
How would you enforce mandatory voting, btw? Employ the Vote Police to frogmarch every voter to a polling booth?
- Kaylee
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TBH I'd argue we have the sfaest roads in Europe. I don't think fines and cameras will make them safer as they're currently about as safe statistically speaking as you can get them imo. However I'd propose that fines for speeding have helped get the current accident rate to where it is. It's a bit of a clunky analogy tho as you're dealing with a crime which is hard to effectively monitor continually (speed cameras and guns are only used in specific areas) whereas its cut and dry whether someone turned up at a polling station and made their mark, even if its just for the Raving Loony Party.Rebis wrote:It hasn't worked to curtail speeding, so far.
Couple that with the problems of tracking unregistered/unlicenced cars...
- Best First
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so we get stuck with Tony forever?Karl Lynch wrote:Simply, yes imo.Rebis wrote:And what happens if we get a less than 70% turnout? A re-vote? And if that is <70%? Vote again? What if there's never a 70+% turnout? What then? vote infinitum?Karl Lynch wrote:unless we get at least a 70% turnout the vote is invalid
I don't believe a government should be elected unless what imo is a reasonable portion of the country actually vote. In fact make it mandatory and you solve the problem.
- Best First
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