Everyone deserves a say in what their government does and there is no reason why some people should have more of a say than others.
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Replying to @PereGrimmer @itaisher
I hate when I have to get back to the economics and ethics factory to crank out another fifty utils and have no time to respond to the simplest questions in my professional domain
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It’s not like there’s not ways to model this “regime change” using economics. It’d be easy to create a stochastic median voter game with 50 elections and then ask if the median voter has better policy outcomes after we reweight each state election.
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Replying to @JacksonHBrown @PereGrimmer and
Once you're considering "better" policy outcomes then why restrict your method of achieving them to different forms of elections. If I show that some alternative produces better governance (by your criteria) than electing leaders then surely you would endorse that system, right?
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That rabbit hole is so deep of course they want to avoid looking into it. Once you're deciding which voting system is best based on outcome why restrict your search to voting systems? If voting is a fundamental good then why is it so? Unsolvable dilemma of democracy.
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