• bloopernova@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    Competency tests before you can appear on a ballot, with a commission that reviews the requirements to prevent the exclusion of minorities.

    All financial information must be disclosed by anyone with power over others.

    Somehow replace shares with cooperatives and employee ownership.

    No elected judges, with stringent training and yearly bias testing. Like a postdoc in judicial impartiality.

    Same with sheriffs. No elected police. Police should be a career, like a civil engineer. To be promoted, people must pass ever more strict ethics courses.

    Any person who is a position of trust and power who then acts contrary to the ethics of their role can never be elected. Or have power over anyone again.

    Children must be free of religion until they are 25.

    Children must not be mutilated by their parents religion.

    National healthcare.

    USA focused: each state gets one senator, plus one per 2 million residents.

    • NAXLAB@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      A lot of those tests have already been done and were used almost exclusively to enforce segregation.

      • pinkdrunkenelephants@sopuli.xyzOP
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        1 year ago

        To be fair, literally anything can, will be or probably has already been used to enforce discrimination or segregation somewhere in the world. We won’t get anywhere living in fear of bigots.

          • pinkdrunkenelephants@sopuli.xyzOP
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            1 year ago

            Your new government, presumably.

            Though if you can’t trust it to faithfully enforce its laws, why have it? Or any government, for that matter?

            Like, you can take the fear of discrimination to justify not having anything

            • mintyfrog@lemmy.ml
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              1 year ago

              You cannot trust a government to routinely create arbitrary standards used to regulate that same government.

              This is different from a government enforcing your average law because this law applies to the election process itself and allows for significant bias. Where there is room for bias in this process, it will be taken advantage of. Look at gerrymandering.

              What problem does your law actually solve? If people are willing to elect a candidate, isn’t that a sufficient measure of competency? At best you’re creating an elitist state controlled by those who set the bar for competency, and at worst you’re creating a one party state.

              • pinkdrunkenelephants@sopuli.xyzOP
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                1 year ago

                Then you can’t have any government, or really, any meaningful social interaction.

                All democratic governments are built on the assumption they’ll be acted upon in good faith, because without good faith, no cooperation or society is possible. All a society is is a group of people either working together in good faith.

                If you want to go off and live by the law of the jungle, then by all means, go ahead. But the rest of us will move on without you.

    • mintyfrog@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Most of what you’ve described would inevitably lead to the establishment of a single party totalitarian state.

      Competency tests before you can appear on a ballot, with a commission that reviews the requirements to prevent the exclusion of minorities.

      Don’t like the opposing party? Just make it part of the test. Today, one party could exclude the other by including questions that agree or disagree with critical race theory, voter fraud, etc.

      No elected judges, with stringent training and yearly bias testing. Like a postdoc in judicial impartiality.

      Same issue. Who determines impartiality? The party in power? Single party state.

      Any person who is a position of trust and power who then acts contrary to the ethics of their role can never be elected. Or have power over anyone again.

      Who determines “ethics”? Single party state.

      Children must be free of religion until they are 25.

      What is religion? You’re definitely banning several books, and possibly banning a lot more. Many books can be turned into a religion or contain religious aspects. The party in power decides what’s a religion and what gets banned.

      USA focused: each state gets one senator, plus one per 2 million residents.

      At that point, why have a separate Senate and House? The point of a two-chambered Congress is to balance state and federal power.