Suppose for a second that 20% of the population wasn't allowed to vote. Now suppose that the poorest 20% of the population wasn't allowed to vote... see the problem yet?
This is the point...
Or in a less Utopian and more Tragic perspective: I don't trust anybody on the planet enough to let them write an objective test that wouldn't be abused by them or the givers. If society ever had the ability to create and maintain such an objective test, the test itself wouldn't be necessary, as the creation process for the test would itself be a better system of government.
Yanlin, I don't think anybody is failing to understand you, so much as feeling very strongly that the costs far outweigh the benefits.
Admittedly though, society already limits the ability of children, felons, and the mentally retarded from participating in democracy, doesn't it?
It gets back into the
discussion mainiac and I were having. People see no self-benefit from doing the research necessary to pass your political test. I don't think you should worry as much about 'dumb' people that aren't able to pass it as
'ignorant' people that haven't done the research. I can't find any research one way or the other, but I'll hazard a guess that a significant(greater than 50%) number of voters are operating under at least one serious misconception about either the candidates or the voting process.
Things like :
The real effects of our casual drug policy, the full story about single payer health care, what insurance really does, the historically measured effects of increased corporate taxes, etc
I'm not talking opinions here, I'm talking facts. You get to have your own opinions, not your own facts. (Hopefully that list is non-confrontational. Especially healthcare, I don't think anyone on either side understands what all the issues are)
Mainiac:
If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary. In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself.
James Madison, Federalist No. 51 (1788-02-06)