
disenfranchisement is a real problem with the current voting system
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Thu 14 Apr 2011, 11:07,
archived)

Sitting at the sidelines and complaining is simply childish.
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Thu 14 Apr 2011, 11:09,
archived)

what you are saying is that if you can't vote for what you want vote for anything else as that's better than voting for nothing - just wrong!
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Thu 14 Apr 2011, 11:11,
archived)

For people who are too stupid to be able to turn up and spoil their ballot paper (which means it is counted).
If there's nothing to vote for, start your own party or don't express opinions on pololotics - it's pretty simple. If you're not doing something to change what you're complaining about, clearly it's not so bad.
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Thu 14 Apr 2011, 11:18,
archived)
If there's nothing to vote for, start your own party or don't express opinions on pololotics - it's pretty simple. If you're not doing something to change what you're complaining about, clearly it's not so bad.

with tiny, delicate bells, carved from emeralds plundered from the very jewel-vaults of Xerxes himself, on.
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Thu 14 Apr 2011, 11:21,
archived)

often it isn't and standing in elections isn't as easy as you think (yes I have been on that side of things) you have to pay £5,000 and if you don't get 5% of the vote you lose your deposit which is a major deterent for many people and parties from standing. So what do I see on my ballot sheet? Tory, Lib Dems, Labour, BNP, UKIP and if I'm lucky some near left alternative like Greens or some Socialist Alliance which are my first preferrences but if they don't stand then they can kiss my arse I'm not voting for any of the rest!
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Thu 14 Apr 2011, 11:23,
archived)

whether voting is made compulsory (which i actually sincerely doubt will happen) or not, there should be the option of showing your antipathy towards the choices you've got. something better than not showing up or just spoiling the paper. if enough people vote for "none of the above" it might be a sign to smaller parties that this is a constituency that can be targetted properly.
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Thu 14 Apr 2011, 11:26,
archived)

because candidates have an incentive to be as vanilla as possible, and any radical suggestion will almost certainly be watered down to make it palatable to the majority.
Voting gives the impression of political activity; I'm not sure that it counts as much more, though.
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Thu 14 Apr 2011, 11:21,
archived)
Voting gives the impression of political activity; I'm not sure that it counts as much more, though.

They all made some pretty big changes
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Thu 14 Apr 2011, 11:54,
archived)

Exceptional cases make for bad rules...
Hitler was hardly what we'd term a free and fair job, though. Atlee I'll grant you, although there the circumstances were exceptional. Thatcher, I think, was nowhere near as radical as her fanboys make out. All she did was paint in more stark terms the basic drift towards economic libertarianism that had marked the previous decades (and, arguably, most decades since the early 19th C).
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Thu 14 Apr 2011, 13:46,
archived)
Hitler was hardly what we'd term a free and fair job, though. Atlee I'll grant you, although there the circumstances were exceptional. Thatcher, I think, was nowhere near as radical as her fanboys make out. All she did was paint in more stark terms the basic drift towards economic libertarianism that had marked the previous decades (and, arguably, most decades since the early 19th C).