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musings about 'democracy' 

More and more, I'm feeling like there's a suspicious lack of evidence that policies such as "majority voting" and "electing people" are actually reasonable or rational ways to arrive at the claimed goals of democracy, at all.

Like, I have always had my issues with the failures of these systems, personally, but I would at least entertain the possibility of there being a hypothetical Good Implementation that could work.

I don't think I believe that anymore, and over the years I have seen basically nothing to convince me otherwise.

And to go even further, I am starting to believe that the only possible long-term outcome of both of these systems is authoritarianism, and no sustainable mitigations to this exist.

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musings about 'democracy' (2) 

And to clarify, this is about the *institution* of democracy, and how a society should be organized to achieve its goals, the idea that people have of how a "democracy" is actually achieved.

It's not about one's personal choice to vote, which is a completely separate consideration - the system is as the system is today.

musings about 'democracy' 

@joepie91 In the modern sense, Democracy always had to be a "Democracy, or else...". Universal voting rigths were concessions from royalty/elites fearing for their lives. The "or else" of today is more or less unthinkable.

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