Those Who Take Government Money Should Not Vote

Posted by $ MikeMarotta 6 years, 6 months ago to Philosophy
138 comments | Share | Best of... | Flag

Elected officials, appointed officials, employees of agencies and departments, soldiers, police, teachers, people on welfare...

You might think that if people on welfare could not vote, the Democrat party would be hurt (and it would) but the Republican Party would suffer more. People on welfare, as we usually think of it, as aid to families with children, already tend not to vote. The habitual turn-out at the polls comes from old people, Republicans on social security.

For myself, serving in the Texas Military Department, I decided not to vote in state elections.
(See my blog post here: https://necessaryfacts.blogspot.com/2... )

What about people who work for Lockheed-Martin, Boeing, ArmaLite, or Wornick?

Where do you draw the line? By what standard do you decide?


All Comments


Previous comments...   You are currently on page 3.
  • Posted by ewv 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Vote buying is properly illegal and should not be entrenched in the voting system itself. Allowing billionaires to swamp everyone else with their votes is not representative government and has nothing to do with rational selection of government representation.
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  • Posted by ewv 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Heinlein's bizarre theory, stated here as the right to vote must be earned by "service in the military or other duties requiring some degree of personal sacrifice", is irrelevant altruistic sacrifice and collectivism. Arguing whether one can vote during or only after a completion of sacrifice is like the rationalistic, meaningless arguments from false premises of Middle Ages Scholastics.
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  • Posted by ewv 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Errors (not betrayal) in the Constitution do not mean there is no right to vote, nor is it true that "as it was written voting is not a right", nor do rights, including those exercised locally, come from the Federal government at all. Rights in the Constitution were codifications of natural rights in the form of objective acknowledgments of procedures and requirements limiting government power. The Bill of Rights included "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people" and "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people". None of that means that voting is not a right, either natural or civil encoded in law, or that the Constitution says it is not a right.
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  • Posted by ewv 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    "So what we have now supposedly represents..." is not a conclusion from what I wrote and changes the subject from the sweeping claim that "strictly speaking there shouldn’t be voting at all". There cannot be a government representing the people without the people being able to select who runs it.
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  • Posted by Solver 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    “The right to vote is a consequence, not a primary cause, of a free social system—and its value depends on the constitutional structure implementing and strictly delimiting the voters’ power; unlimited majority rule is an instance of the principle of tyranny.”
    -Ayn Rand
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  • Posted by $ 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    It is an idea. See my comments here about THE SECRET OF THE LEAGUE by Ernst Bramah. There, shares in the government were 500 UKP each. Each share was a vote. Buy as many as you want.
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  • Posted by $ 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Voting is not a right.

    Ayn Rand identified or at least suggested that the Constitution was betrayed by its own internal contradictions. And as it was written, voting - which is controlled LOCALLY not by the federal government - is not a right.
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  • Posted by term2 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    So what we have now supposedly represents the people of the USA under a constitution and is run basically by the majority of the people

    It certainly makes me uneasy that despite that constitution , this country has become fascist and run by a leftist mob

    Just makes me very uneasy that I can’t not support this government when it violates my rughts
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  • Posted by ewv 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    What does any of that have to do with what we are talking about? Changing the culture requires rational education over time, not "messaging to public" assuming "willing proletarian masses", whatever that means.

    Whatever "messaging" is involved in the short term would have to be principled rational appeals to individualism and what is left of the American sense of life in commentary and in politics (not waiting for the eve of an election) to the extent feasible at this stage of the culture, not manipulative demagoguery pandering to the opposite.

    What is a "circle jerk" and what does "like this forum" mean?
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  • Posted by $ Thoritsu 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Messaging to public, that needs to be turned around. Anyone else (like this forum) is a circle jerk!

    Taking a Boy Scout's position that "This is the right way" is L O N G lost.

    The proletariat masses are willing, but we need to turn them back, against the messages of the totalitarians , who have already grabbed the wheel. "Eat your spinach" is a dead loser.
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  • Posted by ewv 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Government is not an anarcho-capitalist self-perpetuating corporation that is either 'contracted' with or ignored. It represents the people of the nation under a Constitution. Who runs it is selected by those people.
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  • Posted by term2 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    If the government doesn’t violate my rights, don’t I vote by freely supporting it or not supporting it?

    I suppose if you are proposing the government was acting like a corporation where I am a stockholder, I suppose voting for the board of directions would be appropriate.
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  • Posted by ewv 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    What messaging to whom? It's a statement here of the essence. What is a "boy scout's position"?
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  • Posted by $ Thoritsu 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I agree with everything except the messaging and path pack to where we started. Just taking a boyscout's position will fail.
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  • Posted by ewv 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Those who take money from others should be in jail. That's not a matter of voting or forfeiting future voting.

    As government makes more and more people dependent on it, taking away the right to vote would be massive and result in dictatorship, but it can't done that way. The welfare state mentality will not allow removing voting rights for receiving government subsidies, but it has other ideas of how to rationalize disenfranchisement.
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  • Posted by ewv 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    What "diatribe"? The country got into this state from the spread of false ideas over a period of more than a century. It won't get out of it without changing the ideas widely accepted. Proper basic principles of reason and individualism must be articulated and defended.
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  • Posted by ewv 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Who's the coward who emotionally 'downvoted' this distinction and ran from the discussion.
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  • Posted by ewv 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    The problem you have is not accounting for how the people who run the government are selected.
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  • Posted by ewv 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Welfare statism will not be replaced by private charity without reversing the altruist-collectivist mentality. "Compromises" will continue in the same trend to mean increased statism. Their "compromises" always mean taking what they can get and coming back for the rest later.
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  • Posted by term2 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I think the problem I have is that what exactly would a government do that it needed to collect votes on. If the money coming into it was determined by freely given donations, the lack of donations in itself would determine if it was approved of by the populace.
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  • Posted by $ Radio_Randy 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I agree that I don't pay income tax in Washington state (I'm a state employee), but I do pay Federal income taxes and the Feds don't employee me. I'm not sure I understand how can suggest that I don't pay taxes. Additionally, I am a land owner and it is my understanding that, once upon a time, they were the ONLY people who were allowed to vote (a situation I likely would've agreed with).

    I don't know Heinlein's Theory (though I'm a fan of his writing), but since it IS a theory, I will maintain my position and disagree with it. So far as I am aware, my copy of the U.S. Constitution doesn't have any wording that precludes U.S. servicemen from voting, though there may be some interpretation of that document I haven't been led to understand.
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  • Posted by $ Thoritsu 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I'll have to say, that an appeal to fairness in:
    1) Changing Welfare from a charity donation to a get off welfare program
    2) Appeal to fairness, which clearly works. We are paying for these people, why are we having them decide our future.
    This will work if the government INCREASES welfare funding, with an act to institute a privately run program to take people off it, and then as the welfare roles drop, appeal to fairness.
    Getting people to agree welfare is inappropriate will NOT happen as a next step from where we are.
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  • Posted by ewv 6 years, 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    "Turning the ship" requires changing fundamental ideas popularly accepted. Attempting to remove the right to vote by welfare recipients without that is hopeless. It is not a practical "sell" when most people think welfare is a "right". It only plays into the hands of those promoting class warfare and promote the notion that political disputes are class warfare, not differences in principles.
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