Wednesday, May 27, 2009

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.

Read more...

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).

Read more...

About This Blog

The world would be a better place if only we could just make a difference. Some small, meaningful change; a real one, without the usual overwhelming negative side effects that seem to turn so many positive things against themselves....

  © Blogger templates The Professional Template by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP