Third-world democracies are often driven by large populations of un-educated voters, resulting in poorly chosen elected officials and mass amounts of corruption. A large stable middle-class tends to stabilize the voting, which indirectly stabilizes the country.
Restricting the voters to something elite like 'land owners' defeats the fairness principles enshrined in democracies. A better approach is for the government to restrict voters based on education. To vote, one needs to pass a basic education. To make it fair, the government needs to offer that specific level (it need not be that high) to everyone, guaranteed, for free (and in night courses too). A better educated set of voters will make more balanced choices.
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Monday, May 25, 2009
Simple answers to complex problems always make the problems worse.
You cannot solve a complex problem with anything other than a complex solution; partially solving a problem is just adding to it. The solution must fully cover the problem, or the ignored attributes will cause major side-effects.
A simple answer will work fine for a simple problem, but likely somebody has probably already solved that (since it's simple, and your unlikely to be first).
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