fortyfortyforty
New Member
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2012
- Messages
- 16
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2008
Is everyone having the right to vote a good idea?
For a voter, the voting process is basically taking a mix of (at least) history, law, economics and science, connecting it all together and then applying it (or post a better definition).
If you think that you don't need to know anything about the topics that make up the political process to be allowed to vote, why?
If you do, then do you think it's a good idea to give people who don't know anything about those subjects the right to vote? Think of the % of people who actually have degrees in those subjects, or the % of people who have the mental ability to just pick those things up. What % of people in Australia/any country can actually take the facts relevant to politics, and come to well-rounded decisions about the correct long-term decisions for the country?
For a voter, the voting process is basically taking a mix of (at least) history, law, economics and science, connecting it all together and then applying it (or post a better definition).
If you think that you don't need to know anything about the topics that make up the political process to be allowed to vote, why?
If you do, then do you think it's a good idea to give people who don't know anything about those subjects the right to vote? Think of the % of people who actually have degrees in those subjects, or the % of people who have the mental ability to just pick those things up. What % of people in Australia/any country can actually take the facts relevant to politics, and come to well-rounded decisions about the correct long-term decisions for the country?