I do not believe in the right to vote. We've all been over why I feel this way, most of you disagree with me. I don't believe humans have the right to exercise control over one another, especially not based on numerical majority.
I don't believe the ends justify the means
is the one that engages in coercive activity as rarely as possible.
You cannot make a claim to morality while actively engaging in violence and coercion. You just can't. You might be able to say you're less of a cunt than the next guy, but you'd still be a cunt.
I think where we disagree here is whether there must be coercion.
I have sometimes wondered if most leaders having only 4 years in power actually limits what a government can do, as if there's a problem that would take several terms to solve, then whatever steps you do to try and solve it could be just undone or discontinued by the next guy so there's no point starting with some problems. Is this a valid thing to consider?I know jack all about this kind of stuff so I'd be interested in hearing what someone who actually knows something about this thinks.
Quote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 03:08:54 AMI have sometimes wondered if most leaders having only 4 years in power actually limits what a government can do, as if there's a problem that would take several terms to solve, then whatever steps you do to try and solve it could be just undone or discontinued by the next guy so there's no point starting with some problems. Is this a valid thing to consider?I know jack all about this kind of stuff so I'd be interested in hearing what someone who actually knows something about this thinks.It does make it less effective. A one term president could have all of his stuff undone by the next president. That's why you see a lot of democracies go an extra year or so with their leaders. Some at least.
Quote from: Luciana on January 06, 2016, 03:40:35 AMQuote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 03:08:54 AMI have sometimes wondered if most leaders having only 4 years in power actually limits what a government can do, as if there's a problem that would take several terms to solve, then whatever steps you do to try and solve it could be just undone or discontinued by the next guy so there's no point starting with some problems. Is this a valid thing to consider?I know jack all about this kind of stuff so I'd be interested in hearing what someone who actually knows something about this thinks.It does make it less effective. A one term president could have all of his stuff undone by the next president. That's why you see a lot of democracies go an extra year or so with their leaders. Some at least.Huh. So another advantage of (a specific part of) OPs point, if there wasn't a leader change every few years, a government could actually be more effective? That's interesting.
Quote from: Brian Butterfield on January 06, 2016, 04:24:48 AMQuote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 03:42:16 AMQuote from: Luciana on January 06, 2016, 03:40:35 AMQuote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 03:08:54 AMI have sometimes wondered if most leaders having only 4 years in power actually limits what a government can do, as if there's a problem that would take several terms to solve, then whatever steps you do to try and solve it could be just undone or discontinued by the next guy so there's no point starting with some problems. Is this a valid thing to consider?I know jack all about this kind of stuff so I'd be interested in hearing what someone who actually knows something about this thinks.It does make it less effective. A one term president could have all of his stuff undone by the next president. That's why you see a lot of democracies go an extra year or so with their leaders. Some at least.Huh. So another advantage of (a specific part of) OPs point, if there wasn't a leader change every few years, a government could actually be more effective? That's interesting.Yup. Only downside to that is if you or even a majority don't agree with a lifetime leader's decisions, tough shit.Think how fast policies were created in post-Weimar Republic Germany. Shame it was by Hitler...This is probably going to sound weird coming from me, but from a government standpoint, Hitler really wasn't all that bad.
Quote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 03:42:16 AMQuote from: Luciana on January 06, 2016, 03:40:35 AMQuote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 03:08:54 AMI have sometimes wondered if most leaders having only 4 years in power actually limits what a government can do, as if there's a problem that would take several terms to solve, then whatever steps you do to try and solve it could be just undone or discontinued by the next guy so there's no point starting with some problems. Is this a valid thing to consider?I know jack all about this kind of stuff so I'd be interested in hearing what someone who actually knows something about this thinks.It does make it less effective. A one term president could have all of his stuff undone by the next president. That's why you see a lot of democracies go an extra year or so with their leaders. Some at least.Huh. So another advantage of (a specific part of) OPs point, if there wasn't a leader change every few years, a government could actually be more effective? That's interesting.Yup. Only downside to that is if you or even a majority don't agree with a lifetime leader's decisions, tough shit.Think how fast policies were created in post-Weimar Republic Germany. Shame it was by Hitler...
Quote from: NukaKV on January 06, 2016, 04:36:02 AMQuote from: Brian Butterfield on January 06, 2016, 04:24:48 AMQuote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 03:42:16 AMQuote from: Luciana on January 06, 2016, 03:40:35 AMQuote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 03:08:54 AMI have sometimes wondered if most leaders having only 4 years in power actually limits what a government can do, as if there's a problem that would take several terms to solve, then whatever steps you do to try and solve it could be just undone or discontinued by the next guy so there's no point starting with some problems. Is this a valid thing to consider?I know jack all about this kind of stuff so I'd be interested in hearing what someone who actually knows something about this thinks.It does make it less effective. A one term president could have all of his stuff undone by the next president. That's why you see a lot of democracies go an extra year or so with their leaders. Some at least.Huh. So another advantage of (a specific part of) OPs point, if there wasn't a leader change every few years, a government could actually be more effective? That's interesting.Yup. Only downside to that is if you or even a majority don't agree with a lifetime leader's decisions, tough shit.Think how fast policies were created in post-Weimar Republic Germany. Shame it was by Hitler...This is probably going to sound weird coming from me, but from a government standpoint, Hitler really wasn't all that bad.Yeah. He pretty much turned germany around from depression to superpower in a fairly short amount of time. It's pretty incredible.
Quote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 04:42:22 AMQuote from: NukaKV on January 06, 2016, 04:36:02 AMQuote from: Brian Butterfield on January 06, 2016, 04:24:48 AMQuote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 03:42:16 AMQuote from: Luciana on January 06, 2016, 03:40:35 AMQuote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 03:08:54 AMI have sometimes wondered if most leaders having only 4 years in power actually limits what a government can do, as if there's a problem that would take several terms to solve, then whatever steps you do to try and solve it could be just undone or discontinued by the next guy so there's no point starting with some problems. Is this a valid thing to consider?I know jack all about this kind of stuff so I'd be interested in hearing what someone who actually knows something about this thinks.It does make it less effective. A one term president could have all of his stuff undone by the next president. That's why you see a lot of democracies go an extra year or so with their leaders. Some at least.Huh. So another advantage of (a specific part of) OPs point, if there wasn't a leader change every few years, a government could actually be more effective? That's interesting.Yup. Only downside to that is if you or even a majority don't agree with a lifetime leader's decisions, tough shit.Think how fast policies were created in post-Weimar Republic Germany. Shame it was by Hitler...This is probably going to sound weird coming from me, but from a government standpoint, Hitler really wasn't all that bad.Yeah. He pretty much turned germany around from depression to superpower in a fairly short amount of time. It's pretty incredible.It was short term recovery and relied on resources from other countries, first by trade and then by invading and taking the resources themselves or by slave labour.In 19 years of Hitler's reign he was running a total war economy despite being in control of all of Western Europe, North Africa and a large chunk of Western Russia.
Quote from: Brian Butterfield on January 06, 2016, 04:48:48 AMQuote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 04:42:22 AMQuote from: NukaKV on January 06, 2016, 04:36:02 AMQuote from: Brian Butterfield on January 06, 2016, 04:24:48 AMQuote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 03:42:16 AMQuote from: Luciana on January 06, 2016, 03:40:35 AMQuote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 03:08:54 AMI have sometimes wondered if most leaders having only 4 years in power actually limits what a government can do, as if there's a problem that would take several terms to solve, then whatever steps you do to try and solve it could be just undone or discontinued by the next guy so there's no point starting with some problems. Is this a valid thing to consider?I know jack all about this kind of stuff so I'd be interested in hearing what someone who actually knows something about this thinks.It does make it less effective. A one term president could have all of his stuff undone by the next president. That's why you see a lot of democracies go an extra year or so with their leaders. Some at least.Huh. So another advantage of (a specific part of) OPs point, if there wasn't a leader change every few years, a government could actually be more effective? That's interesting.Yup. Only downside to that is if you or even a majority don't agree with a lifetime leader's decisions, tough shit.Think how fast policies were created in post-Weimar Republic Germany. Shame it was by Hitler...This is probably going to sound weird coming from me, but from a government standpoint, Hitler really wasn't all that bad.Yeah. He pretty much turned germany around from depression to superpower in a fairly short amount of time. It's pretty incredible.It was short term recovery and relied on resources from other countries, first by trade and then by invading and taking the resources themselves or by slave labour.In 19 years of Hitler's reign he was running a total war economy despite being in control of all of Western Europe, North Africa and a large chunk of Western Russia.Wasn't he doing pretty good even before he started invading Czechoslovakia and making concentration camps? It's been a while since I did this topic, so I'm a bit rusty on it.
Quote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 04:58:26 AMQuote from: Brian Butterfield on January 06, 2016, 04:48:48 AMQuote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 04:42:22 AMQuote from: NukaKV on January 06, 2016, 04:36:02 AMQuote from: Brian Butterfield on January 06, 2016, 04:24:48 AMQuote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 03:42:16 AMQuote from: Luciana on January 06, 2016, 03:40:35 AMQuote from: TR8Rshelf on January 06, 2016, 03:08:54 AMI have sometimes wondered if most leaders having only 4 years in power actually limits what a government can do, as if there's a problem that would take several terms to solve, then whatever steps you do to try and solve it could be just undone or discontinued by the next guy so there's no point starting with some problems. Is this a valid thing to consider?I know jack all about this kind of stuff so I'd be interested in hearing what someone who actually knows something about this thinks.It does make it less effective. A one term president could have all of his stuff undone by the next president. That's why you see a lot of democracies go an extra year or so with their leaders. Some at least.Huh. So another advantage of (a specific part of) OPs point, if there wasn't a leader change every few years, a government could actually be more effective? That's interesting.Yup. Only downside to that is if you or even a majority don't agree with a lifetime leader's decisions, tough shit.Think how fast policies were created in post-Weimar Republic Germany. Shame it was by Hitler...This is probably going to sound weird coming from me, but from a government standpoint, Hitler really wasn't all that bad.Yeah. He pretty much turned germany around from depression to superpower in a fairly short amount of time. It's pretty incredible.It was short term recovery and relied on resources from other countries, first by trade and then by invading and taking the resources themselves or by slave labour.In 19 years of Hitler's reign he was running a total war economy despite being in control of all of Western Europe, North Africa and a large chunk of Western Russia.Wasn't he doing pretty good even before he started invading Czechoslovakia and making concentration camps? It's been a while since I did this topic, so I'm a bit rusty on it.Well he lowered male unemployment, but did that by not taking into account the Jews that were sacked from the public sector and strongly encouraging women to leave their jobs for men to fill their place.He created public work programs to cover the rest, but things like the Autobahn and forest clearings were one-time jobs that after completion would leave many jobless with little prospects other than the military.Sorry OP, waaaay off topic.
Democracy is a cancer.
I don't know why it became so controversial to say that men and women are psychologically and anatomically different.