Is a party really in a position to remove itself from an individual? If I tell people "I am a Republican," is there someone somewhere who has the authority to say, "Sorry, Bookworm, but you are not."? Isn't the accountibility actually in the election process? We can vote someone out of office if they are a failure, but a political party cannot "remove itself from an individual" apart from the voting process.
I am unaware of how someone can vote out an elected official, unless you are speaking of voting again in pre-arranged election after a term has been served? If this is the case, I wouldn't call it "voting someone out of office" as it happens on a schedule and not after a perceived wrong. It would also happen no matter how good or bad a leader is perceived to be.
How does the dissolusion of the Democrat party or the Republican party aid in the accountibilty of the elected leaders?
It is the party who is responsible for placing the elected leader in their position. If the leader has wronged the party should should share in the discipline. The party must admit it has wronged and work toward achieving a remedy. Failure of achieving a remedy should be dissolution.
But "choice" is still very much involved, even if people can predict what the election outcome will be. The predictions are all based on the choices of people. And sometimes even those predictions are wrong. Minnesote elected Jesse Ventura to be governor, and nobody had predicted that his third-party candidancy would win.
Jesse Ventura's election is a exception and I don't accept it as an example in an argument. I use this rule in an argument of rape in abortion, where the majority of abortions are not 'rape' related, and have minimal influence on the theory of an argument, but carry far more weight in the process.
"Choice" if it exists in elections is unsatisfactory therefore Void's the choice. If you were forced to sell your home and I offered you $5.00 for it, would you consider this a choice? I can even argue that an offer of $5.00 isn't even an offer, therefore without an offer you were in no position to make a choice. If this can be true of a real every day event of bankruptcies, then it should also be true of a much more rarer and important 'choice' in elections
But the candidates available are the $5.00 choice or the $6.00 choice, and I do not consider them choices at all. They represent an offer that is so offensive to the ideal of democracy, they are Voided, they do not exist because they take advantage of a system that is designed to offer people choice.
Archived topic from Anythingforums, old topic ID:3941, old post ID:69076