Muso:
Quote:Go on believing that if you like. It's the old fallacy of discarding information that's not in your favour. The works of Aristotle are "irrelevant" to you. The works of Thomas Jefferson are also irrelevant, as are the courses on political science at universities throughout the world
They are irrelevant to this debate muso. You appear to be arguing that anything improtant to you is relevant to whether voting should be compulsory. Your whole argument is built on drawing absurdly long bows, hence my constant and uinanswered requests to you for explanations about why it is relevant.
Quote:Once again, freedom is the foundation of democracy AND democracy is a way of achieving freedom. They are concepts that are intricately woven together. Erode one and you erode the other.
Nice generalisation Muso, but once you get specific, you have a hard time arguing that taking away someone's right to not vote undermines democracy? Is this why you keep escaping to vague arm waving waffle?
Quote:The Greeks - but how does that affect my argument? OK, but we're getting a bit off topic here.
Oh really? Who'd have thought that Muso's constant attempts to define demcoracy by Greek standards and to equate the right not to vote with freedom of the press would take people down irrelevant tangents?
Quote:As you can see, democracies have varying interpretations, and the factor that sorts out the good liberal democracies from the democracies that are in name only, is freedom.
There, he is doing it again.
GM:
Quote:firstly, it ISNT law nor is it even debated legislation. It is nothing more than a proposed idea that has been rejected by almost everyone and you are using a worst-case scenario. And your bleating about how good Europe is in human rights is a little silly since they are the home of the anti-discrimination legislation you hate so much.
They have even banned certain items of clothing. France puts an extreme version of secularism above freedom.
Quote:Your 'human rights' are the ones you get to actually enjoy EVERY DAY. BTW the High Court has confirmed that the constitution has a protection of Free Speech in it. We have a democracy that is regarded as 'among the worlds best and most stable'.
Partly because the outcome does not depend on which minority group gets most wound up on election day.
Hicks:
Quote:The rest of the developed world also thinks forcing people to vote is absurd.
Argumentum ad populum is a logical fallacy.
Quote:A dictatorship forces people to vote.
So is argument by association.
Quote:In a free society, if I believe that none of the candidates are any good, I have the option of not getting out of my chair and voting.
But you don't have the option of not being ruled by one of them.
Quote:Democratic is - if I don't want to vote, then I don't.
I see you also struggle with the meaning of democracy.
Quote:There is no reason to force people to vote.
Denying the existence of arguments made by your opposition is not the same as rationally countering them.
Quote:It is why NOBODY has this system, you do realize that.
Do I need to explain why this is wrong Hicks?
Quote:If I don't want to, then call it lazy if you like
Thanks, we will.
Quote:What we are arguing is that it is wrong to tell people they have to.
Wow. You must have thought about this for like, 20 seconds.
Bigol:
Quote:Like I said I'm more than happy to totally agree with us being the world's best at human rights if you can shown me where any of our rights actually exist
Reality isn't good enough for you? You need a piece of paper instead?
Muso:
Quote:Don't be melodramatic. They fought for no such thing, and they fought hand in hand with UK and US soliders who don't have compulsary voting.
You seem to have missed the point GM was making. He was obviously not implying that they fought for compulsory voting.
Quote:People don't like change. That's all it is. To some extent, I understand the "if it's not broke, don't try to fix it" point of view, but I'm all for encouraging people to think outside the box.
You can start by finally explaining the relevance of your argument, beyond vague and meaningless word association games.