And FTR I'm getting Borda dis.
ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
First thing that's justified the thread title in ages.
A thread to discuss naming threads, board policy, new thread suggestions, and anything else that has to do with board administration and maintenance. Guaranteed to include lively debate and polls. Natter discouraged, but not deleted.
Current Stompy Feet: ita, Jon B, DXMachina, P.M. Marcontell, Liese S., amych
And FTR I'm getting Borda dis.
ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
First thing that's justified the thread title in ages.
But if we decide to reduce everything to binary choices, and then vote on things that require mutliple options, then we still have to do multiple balloting - another form of doing arithmetic multiple times. The Australian system is simpler than multiple ballots for the same number of choices.
how do we decide on minimum turnout size, or minimu yes vote size (as Maya suggested) without preference balloting?
You can do that with runoffs.
Or, if someone proposes a simple binary option, Simple Maj/Two-thirds deathmatch, and nobody objects, we can just make that choice and be done with it.
You know, I had foolishly thought that this voting idea was going to make things less complex.
Ah, but making things more bureaucratic NEVER simplifies anything.
I miss my old benevolent dictatorship.
You can do that with runoffs
But John H. The Austrialian system is runoffs, simply done all at once and counted in a fairer manner.
The Condercet system is also run-off, done all at once, and counted in a fairer manner than the Borda system.
Again, suppose we decide on a minimum turnout, what is called a quorum on the ballot? How is a run-off simpler than an Australian ballot?
Ah, but making things more bureaucratic NEVER simplifies anything.
Word.
Overcomplicated policy wonking gives me shivers of "dear lord, what can of worms have we opened here?"
Signed, I Had To Fill Out A Ballot The Size Of A Fucking Bathtowel Last Federal Election.
Nyuk. That's why people vote the party line.
Joooiinnn uuuusss...
But if we decide to reduce everything to binary choices, and then vote on things that require mutliple options, then we still have to do multiple balloting - another form of doing arithmetic multiple times. The Australian system is simpler than multiple ballots for the same number of choices.
Faster too.
But John H. The Australian system is runoffs, simply done all at once and counted in a fairer manner.
A thousand times yes. (So to speak.) The debacle of the French Presidential election? Would never have happened under the Australian system. Just getting the second-most primary votes is not good enough when everyone else hates your guts.
But John H. The Austrialian system is runoffs, simply done all at once and counted in a fairer manner.
I do know that Gar, but I'm siding with the people who think a system which uses complicated math is going to be very off-putting to some people, not just in terms of trusting you or whoever else to do the calculations -- I trust you completely by the way -- but in terms of forcing them to think which of thirteen possible options they think is the best, which they think is the second best, all the way down to the thirteenth-best.
I think it will discourage people from taking part.
I think it will discourage people from taking part.
Ayup. We aren't quite dictating international policy here. Let's just keep things simple, yet formalised.