PEP 308: Alternative conditional operator forms
Dave Brueck
dave at pythonapocrypha.com
Tue Feb 11 11:23:37 EST 2003
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Tue Feb 11 11:23:37 EST 2003
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On Tue, 11 Feb 2003, Laura Creighton wrote: > > You'll never know how many don't care but didn't vote, so I'm not sure > > if trying to include that as an option in the vote is really going to > > get you a figure that reflects reality. > > It has got to reflect reality better than simply assuming that those > who do not care do not matter, or that those who wish to participate > in the political process must be forced to take sides, or that > abstainers fall neatly into 50% pro/ 50% anti proportions. It also > means that the entire political process is not subordinate to the job > of 'picking winners and losers' ... it actually represents an attempt, > however flawed, to 'find out what people want'. You alienate members > of your society when you hold a vote and give them no way to express > their views. I think that this is evil, and moreover, it makes it > really hard to get them to show up again should you ever decide > to have _another_ referendum. Laura, I find your perspective facinating but I still don't quite "get it" (please don't think I'm being sarcastic - I'm *really* trying to understand you but haven't yet). Can you explain a little more what you mean? When there's a bunch of us deciding to order pizza, I'll often not vote because I don't care. Since the point of voting is to come to a decision, how would tracking my "don't care" vote affect the decision? In effect I _am_ casting a vote - a vote to not participate - so that the people who _do_ care about the influence can work it out amongst themselves. The same holds true for political elections. Sometimes I don't vote because I don't feel informed enough to make a good decision, other times I don't vote because I don't really care either way, and sometimes I do vote. But again I don't see how keeping track of an explicit "don't care" matters - the whole point of the vote is to reach a decision, right? (maybe your point is that it's not the whole point?) If there's a 0.5% voter turnout, then you can infer just as [in]accurately that people don't care about that particular issue, right? This is why "Get Out the Vote" drives in the U.S. scare me - the encourage people who just don't care to participate in making decisions. Yeah, I guess we could add a "don't care" slot to the ballot, but why? What does that _mean_? How should it affect the outcome? FWIW, I am opposed to straight "democratic" voting anyway because the quality of the decision is often rather poor (due to various factors). I'd much rather vote to select a handful of "trusted" individuals - a healthy mix of pro- and con PEPers, and let them go off and have an intelligent debate, and then accept what they come back with, but maybe that's a topic for a different discussion. Thanks for your patience, Dave
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