Six Degrees of Voting 80
An anonymous reader writes "Received a link to SixDegreesOfVoting.com that is a new take on the Registration drive concept. From the Manifesto: 'if we make sure everyone we know is voting, and they make sure everyone they know is voting, and so on, wouldn't everyone be voting?' Match it with a nice flash map showing linked signups, it looks pretty cool (albeit leaning solidly to the left right now)."
Oh great... (Score:2, Insightful)
A lot more is at stake than the presidential election: all the house of representatives, a third of the senate, and lots of state and local elections.
When you force the ignorant into the polling places, they will most likely vote for every selection, even the ones they know nothing about. So you wind up with candidates getting votes because of their party affiliation or
Re:Oh great... (Score:2, Informative)
No, we're in a republic. If we were in a democracy the electorate would vote directly for issues (tax cuts, raises, laws, etc). Instead, we vote for a series of people who make those decisions for us.
Re:Oh great... (Score:2, Informative)
The terms "democracy" and "republic" are not mutually exclusive. In the U.S., we are a constitutional democracy [state.gov] and are accurately described by both the terms "democracy" and
Re:Oh great... (Score:1)
Re:Oh great... (Score:4, Insightful)
What does that mean? How informed is "well-enough informed to cast their votes meaningfully"?
How is one vote more meaningful than another?
The first thing we should be pushing for is for people to get out and vote. The second thing we should be pushing for is for arrogant snobs to STFU. I'll vote straight party line, I'll vote for cool sounding names. I'll vote for women I consider doable or people with an odd number of syllables in their name or whomever else I choice to vote for.
How someone might vote should never be the litmus test on whether they can or should vote.
Re:Oh great... (Score:1)
oh yeah? (Score:2)
I respond to every time someone presumes to have some standard on who should vote and who is better off staying home. None of the big shots who presume to tell other people they shouldn't vote ever steps up with some specifics.
How do you decide my vote is only noise? When i
Re:oh yeah? (Score:1)
Re:oh yeah? (Score:1, Flamebait)
You still haven't come through with specifics. What is 'taking the time to reason'? What is careful reasoning? Can you apply some IQ can come up with an objective standard?
My concern is someone may read about a campaign to discourage the uninformed from voting or "why distort the margin by which a body of ideas wins or loses," and think 'I'm not happy about
Re:oh yeah? (Score:1)
Re:oh yeah? (Score:2)
Re:oh yeah? (Score:2)
Great... (Score:3, Funny)
Since when... (Score:4, Insightful)
Like religion, it should be an individual decision and like religion, I find people who meddle in the affairs of others in these issues annoying.
Re:Since when... (Score:2, Insightful)
Your religion or lack there of, and how you practice it, will have an impact on who your friends are in the irst place.
Re:Since when... (Score:5, Insightful)
In your case, it doesn't seem prudent. But that doesn't mean it is never prudent.
However, let me point you out a little difference to religion.
Contrary to religion is not about makeing you choose a certain party.
Next, wether you like it or not, your life is affected by politics. There are not a lot people that don't care how their life is affected by it and have no particular opinion on anything. But most people say something along the line of: "Well, what I do/say doesn't matter anyway". They have given up.
Re:Since when... (Score:2)
Your certainty of social obligation (rolls eyes) leads me to believe you must be a liberal.
Re:Since when... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Since when... (Score:4, Insightful)
Religion, like voting, is a community descision. People who are members of your community (and not in the YMCA/United Way meaning. I mean the folk who are your real kith) have a duty to share their views with you, and you have an opinion to share your views with them. If you don't, then they're not kith.
It is your busiess that your friends vote because if they don't vote, then the elected officials don't care about them and the government will not bend to assist them.
It is your business what religion your friends are. Formal or informal, agreeing or disagreeing, knowing how a person relates to the divine is part of knowing a person. At the very least, you need to know if you can invite them to be your kid's godparent or trust them to keep the kid from being brainwashed by organized religion.
Oh, and that "meddling" you're referring to--that's called DEMOCRACY.
Re:Since when... (Score:2)
My objection was meddling in other's religious affairs. Perhaps the difference is too subtle for you so I'll spell it out. I know the religion of my friends. I don't nag them to go to church or temple. That would be one instance of the difference.
As to voters, my personal feeling is that if someone doesn't care to vote, they probably aren't informed and probably should not vote. Just my opinion, but I'm enti
Re:Since when... (Score:2)
And besides, it's not like knocking on a door, or calling during dinner time. When the topic du jour rolls around to politics in general, just say you hope your soap-box-toting friends are going to back up their wind-
Humanity is your business. (Score:3, Insightful)
If you were out with a friend and spouse and starting needling them on their choice of birth control--that might be meddling. If your friend starting coughing up blood, saying, 'do you need a doctor?' is not meddling.
I am a little surprised someone who chose the name HotNeedleOfInquiry is worried about being meddlesome.
Re:Humanity is your business. (Score:2)
Don't be. It's merely a reference to the spaceship in Niven's Ringworld, not the Kzinti instrument of torture.
Worse are some of those who do vote... (Score:4, Insightful)
We harp on not having enough people voting but we ignore the bigger problem of having people vote who don't know the issues let alone the players.
Re:Since when... (Score:3, Interesting)
In this election, a lot is a stake. The candidates are not even close on a lot of issues! Let's take a geek issue in bioscience. Stem Cell research. Kerry is for using stem cells harvested from an aborted human fetus. While Bush banned the harvesting of new cells from an abort
Re:Since when... (Score:4, Interesting)
They're ALL gonna vote, because of the opposition to the Bushinista clique.
Republicans, discouraged by their choices will stay home...
One good point... (Score:4, Insightful)
When will we see a nationwide campaign encouraging people not to vote if they don't care? Or what about people who just don't have the time to do the homework? I know too many people who vote based purely on party or distant relationship than on merit.
Re:One good point... (Score:2, Insightful)
Voting based on party is not nessasarily a bad thing. A party designation allows the less then informed citizen to have an idea on where a canidate stands on a given set of issues. No, it doesn't give you a detailed i
party lines (Score:2)
Re:One good point... (Score:4, Interesting)
I like your ideas. The fewer voters there are, the more my vote counts
Re:One good point... (Score:2)
If only they could get a proportional set of people not to vote. Unfortunately, it will be the younger voters who would mostly listen, people who already vote in small numbers. The older set seems to be quite comfortable checking in to the polls every couple of years to fulfill their civic duty.
For the rest of us, the response is more like, "Does that mean I gotta get up from this chair? But Quake 4 just came out!"
Please don't Rock the Vote! (Score:2, Insightful)
Tell it brother and/or sister! If the only section of the paper you read is Sports, please stay home on November 2nd. If you can't tell which party a candidate belongs to without the ballot indicating his affiliation, please stay home. If you can't be bother
Re:Please don't Rock the Vote! (Score:2)
That's the best way that I've seen this said.
Re:One good point... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:One good point... (Score:2)
Are these the deceased people on the voter rolls?
One really bad point. (Score:2, Insightful)
I hope I never live to see that day.
And what makes you so qualified to judge how other people vote? So you know people who vote purely on party. Why isn't that on merit? What if I disagree with every stand in a party platform. Shouldn't I then vote for candidates of another party?
What makes someone so friggin' self righteous they think they can decide who should vote and who shouldn't?
Re:One really bad point. (Score:2)
I agree party is a bad reason to stay home. If you know that one party is more or less closer to your than the others (more than the 2 major ones) vote the party, I don't have a problem with that.
I do have a problem with people who vote on looks. Who won the debates of 1960? Nixon if you listened to the radio, Kennedy if you watched them on TV. I don't care who you vote for so long as it is an informed decision. I don't want you voting for the best looking person, because that person might not be be
Re:One good point... (Score:2)
Some people are concerned because some of the billboards are in areas with high minority concentrations.
Clear Channel, the owners of the billboards, say that it is a teaser for a "non-product" ad campaign that will be revealed October 11th.
My guess: this is actually part of a pro-vote campaign. Get people riled up by telling them not to vote, then post new billboards with some consequences of what happens if you don't vote. (Like th
Re:One good point... (Score:1)
Just in time to make sure that most of the voters they've spent the last two weeks telling not to vote won't even be able to register.
Re:One good point... (Score:2)
Re:One good point... (Score:2)
In all seriousness - I hope that they check ID and confirm that voters should be eligble before registering them at the polls.
Re:One good point... (Score:1)
Re:One good point... (Score:2)
You have to be a US Citizen to vote, obviously. The thing is, if you look at the form, the oath that you have to sign also says "I am a U.S. Citizen." So by signing, you are swearing that you are a citizen, regardless of what the checkbox says.
Re:One good point... (Score:1)
No, I suspect what's actually happening there is those people are not citizens, and just didn't pay attention to the oath.
from a co-founder of the site (Score:1, Informative)
The site is a web of users that works on referrals at the user's discretion. Let's see how far it could go and if it will impact this election in a meaningful way. Never before has something like this been attempted in a political sense.
Use this link to sign up under the root of slashdot community:
http://www.sixdegreesofvoting.com/?ref=296&mac=1c9 7ed8d1c7b [sixdegreesofvoting.com]
Re:from a co-founder of the site (Score:1)
In fact, SOME of "you people" may even say the next election is more important, since it will be the first time a woman receives the presidential nomination from one of the two major parties.
Bush by 15%, and that's the way the Cli
Re:from a co-founder of the site (Score:1)
Or maybe both major parties. Who's to say the Democrats *won't* nominate a woman next time?
-BrentRe:from a co-founder of the site (Score:1)
You may have assumed that I was referring to the Republicans nominating Condi Rice. I don't believe that will happen, though I do give the best odds for her being nominated as a Veep to Guiliani in '08. I'd rather have that ticket the other way around, myself.
Everyone will be registered (Score:2, Insightful)
Some Comments + Explanation (Score:1)
1. Of the people signed up, 65% have left some sort of comment. This means people who are signing up do feel a certain way and aren't signing just to signup.
2. Unlike rock the vote or those sorts of drives we don't actually DO anything or try to force anyone. We are instead a opinion site aimed at being as middle of the road as we can be. Our goal is to create as man
red vs. blue (Score:2)
Re:red vs. blue (Score:1)
Don't Vote (Score:4, Insightful)
People are under the deluded impression that Democracy is just. It isn't. It is just more likely to be just then other forms of government. However, it is perfectly within a democracies ability for 51% of the population to put the other 49% into slavery. The very reason why this nation has a bill of rights is because the founding fathers recognized that Democracy is less then perfect.
Just because 51% of the people say something is right, does not make them right. It just means more people believe one thing over another. Pick your favorite philosopher or political figure. No matter how accepted that person might be right now, at one point they articulated an opinion which the vast majority disagreed with. That didn't make that person wrong, just in disagreement with the rest of the world.
To be perfectly honest, I -don't- want more people to vote. I want less people to vote. As it is now, too many stupid people vote. Too many people vote based upon who has the prettier words, looks the best, or just fills them with a warmer feeling. I don't care if it is the stupid southern house wife you just doesn't trust any liberal because, well, no one in her family ever has since the civil war, or if it is a stupid stoner college student who really has no fucking opinion of his own, but is pretty sure everyone else hates Bush and so he should too. I don't want these people to vote. There input into the system isn't helpful. It is just noise. When they vote, I don't feel any sense of pride that two uneducated idiots made their decision based upon something that has absolutely nothing to do with reality.
Voting is a mechanism to reach a consensus as to who should rule. When you rule, you have the authority to pass laws that will result in violence on the population. I don't care if you pass a law to stop gumball theft. You just authorized violence against your population. Laws don't work without the threat of someone taking either your property or you freedom and sending you to jail.
So, when the decision is coming around as to who gets this power, take it fucking seriously. Don't tell idiots to add their input. If they don't want to vote, good, don't encourage them. The fewer idiots that vote, the more that my vote counts, and the more that non-idiots votes count.
I propose a different solution. Tell your friends not to vote. If they are stupid enough to do as you say, then you are doing the world a favor by keeping them from voting.
Re:Don't Vote (Score:2)
Coz it's probably bad for them in the long run.
If you are smarter than someone in a particular area and they are about to do something stupid, it is not elitism to warn/discourage them. In fact it is your respon
Re:Don't Vote (Score:2)
So, let me see if I understand. I am an elitist because I don't want 'a good looking dolt' to be the most powerful man in the world? Yeah... that just reeks of elitism.
I suppose you would be for 51% of the population enslaving the other 49% if that is what the majority wanted, or would I be an elitist in calling that a bad idea too? More people vo
Nice idea but.... (Score:2)
Are the designers so lame that they can't even name the 50-nifty-united states?
No aloha for me I guess :(
Re:Nice idea but.... (Score:2)
http://www.sixdegreesofvoting.com/faq.php
The Map (Score:1)
WARNING: Pyramid scheme! (Score:1)
Even if this one seems to lack step 2(=??), DONT FALL IT!
Re:WARNING: Pyramid scheme! (Score:1)
Seems more like they are trying to "cheat" idiots out of wasting their vote.
Is this in my best interest? (Score:1)
Why should I be interested in getting people to vote, regardeless of what they vote?
If I convince people to vote, who share my political opinion, then the benefit is obvious.
If I convince people to vote, who would vote for another candidate or party, then I act contrary to my political intentions. The election result I want is less likely to happen as it would be otherwise.
If I convince people to vote, that have no predetermined opin
Re:Is this in my best interest? (Score:1)
Don't you think your friends will be more likely to share your opinion anyway? If that's the case, it would be in your best interests to give a little shout out to make sure they registered and (more importantly) are gonna follow through on E-day.
Especially if your friends live in Florida. Ahem.
Re:Is this in my best interest? (Score:1)
(BTW, registering to vote is mandatory here, just not voting. Everyone gets an invitation per mail)
I just don't get the "convince people to vote just for vote's sake" part
I mean, talking with friends about why I would vote this and that and what would be the best for this country is all good and fine, but that is not what this site promotes.
But I do not think the election results will be any better or clearer if
Im an Asshat (Score:2)
Re:Im an Asshat (Score:1)
Yep.. that's the problem.. all those stupid uniforms. Puts me right off!
Re:Im an Asshat (Score:1)
I'd start an anatagonist site... (Score:2)
Except, I can't be bothered, and you can't make me.