Showing posts with label Congress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Congress. Show all posts

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Congress Is Obsolete

I am by no means a political activist.  But as my frustration continues to mount with current events, I couldn't help but come to this realization.

Democracy, by its very definition, allows the populace to partake in the making of decisions that affect their lives.  But the Founding Fathers were a clever bunch.  They realized two things:

1.  A Direct Democracy, wherein each citizen partakes directly in the legislative process, was impossible 
2.  The general populace was largely unqualified to partake directly anyway

As a result, the US has a Representative Democracy.  But it has become painfully clear that this form of democracy no longer functions.  It no longer represents the people.  It fails in two ways:

1.  It is now owned by corporations 
2.  It consists of representatives who squabble over partisan issues

The first is the biggest problem.  It has become all too easy for a corporation to purchase favorable votes.  Immediately we see the conflict of interest: how can a representative represent the people when a corporation is paying him to vote in its favor?

And if, for whatever reason, the corporate influence is not strong enough, the second issue becomes the motivation.  This can clearly be seen in the current debt ceiling debacle. 

Now, it turns out, both tenets of the Founding Fathers are wrong.  A Direct Democracy is now possible.  And realizing this (and making appropriate changes) would fix both of the failures of Congress.  Today:

1.  It is not only possible, but feasible, to have every single member of the state partake directly in the legislative process

2.  The general populace has sufficient education and information available to partake directly

How can each citizen partake directly?  Technology.  Picture this: Congress is eliminated.  In its place stands an online system.  The system allows any citizen to vote on any law he is interested in.  Any citizen can submit a new bill to be considered by the populace.  If you care enough about a bill, you advertise it.  The system is sophisticated enough to organize all laws and bills so as to show context, conflicts, changes, and history.   

For now, we can leave the Executive and Judicial Branches in tact.  But the populace would itself be the Legislative Branch.  This automatically solves the two major failures of Congress:

1.  No corporation would be able (or willing) to buy every citizen's vote
2.  There is no longer a need for political parties, thus eliminating partisan bickering

The bottom line is: Congress has shown its inability to do its job.  But with current technology, it is obsolete anyway.  It can be removed.

Will this ever happen?  Not without a revolution. 

Fear of losing power corrupts those who wield it and fear of the scourge of power corrupts those who are subject to it. - Aung San Suu Kyi

Would it be a perfect system?  Definitely not.  No human government will truly satisfy our needs.  Only God's government can do that.  But this system would at least leave me less frustrated with the daily news... I think. 

Edit Dec 23, 2013: Scott Adams agrees: 
http://dilbert.com/blog/entry/eliminating_government_in_a_hundred_years/