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Author Topic: science-based political party project  (Read 1218 times)

malimbar04

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science-based political party project
« on: January 13, 2012, 11:17:42 am »

With the new (and instantly popular) atheist party on facebook, I returned to an old idea of making a political party based on science and evidence. If democrats are all about democracy, and republicans are all about Reagan conservatism, then this party would be all about making ideas based on evidence, and then changing those ideas based on better evidence.

What I've put together in about an hour:
Spoiler (click to show/hide)

So, being how smart Dwarf Fortress players are, I'd like your input. What else do I need to put in here? I'm looking both for basic stuff that every such list needs, and I'm looking for other policies that have a great deal of evidence behind them.
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No! No! I will not massacre my children. Instead, I'll make them corpulent on crappy mass-produced quarry bush biscuits and questionably grown mushroom alcohol, and then send them into the military when they turn 12...

klingon13524

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Re: science-based political party project
« Reply #1 on: January 15, 2012, 04:14:05 pm »

Why do you think daylight savings time is bad? We're on it for a reason.
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Maybe it's parasitic. It never loses its flavor because you eventually die from having your nutrients stolen by it.

NobodyPro

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Re: science-based political party project
« Reply #2 on: January 15, 2012, 08:12:38 pm »

I agree with klingon, in what way is daylight savings damaging to farmers. Seems to work perfectly in Australia.
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Starver

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Re: science-based political party project
« Reply #3 on: January 15, 2012, 09:16:13 pm »

Doesn't matter to cows and sheep and things.  And doesn't even matter to farmers, who'd probably be getting up at dawn (or a near constant difference from[1]) regardless of what time it is, because of them having to tend to their charges' needs.[2]


Anyway, um... what I was going to say is that I feel that scientifically-derived laws is going to be difficult.  In too many circumstances to really allow you to skim over them, it gets rather Newtonian.  i.e.: For every expert, there's an equal and opposite expert.


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Cthulhu

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Re: science-based political party project
« Reply #4 on: January 15, 2012, 09:44:29 pm »

Yeah, if you could run the country on pure empiricism it would've been done by now.  There's too much gray in politics, too many choices where all the options are equally shitty.
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LordBucket

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Re: science-based political party project
« Reply #5 on: January 16, 2012, 03:49:53 am »

this party would be all about making ideas based on evidence, and
then changing those ideas based on better evidence.

I'm uncertain what you mean by this. How does making ideas relate to governance or law?

malimbar04

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Re: science-based political party project
« Reply #6 on: January 16, 2012, 03:59:23 am »

@Klingon @NobodyPro
The only real rational I've ever seen for it (and the driving force behind it's adoption) was to save energy by using less artificial light. It doesn't do that, and if anything it does the exact opposite.

@Starver @Cthulhu The goal isn't to have a PURE empiricism in a country, only to use science when it's relevant. If experiment has not proven one thing or another, then it's still flexible - just like many of the positions of our political parties today.

But it's kind've silly that we still have laws (and even provisions in state constitutions), that are proven to not do what they were design to do, are overturned by the courts, or are just plain silly to the point that no one recognises them as relevant anymore.

And it's not just about cleaning up, but also about making the idea of science useful to politics. It's easy to say global warming (for example) is a con-job set up by the opposition who hate the wealthy, at least when their only accountability is to other politicians and a few radio hosts. it's much harder when the politician on the other side just hands out experiment after experiment showing "yeah, it's real, it's caused by us, and here are things we can do about it. I'm open to other suggestions though." - and then suddenly one politician looks like a complete ass, and our side wins.

@LordBucket
I'll attack this with hypotheticals.
Imagine a consumption tax designed to replace the income and property tax entirely. Lets say that we get a bunch of economists together and they say "yeah, all evidence shows that this is the best way to for a country". We support it.

Now lets say it's enacted, and it utterly fails. Lets say that in the first 5 years, we lose revenue across the board, the poor and middle class become far more poor by standard of living, and corruption or tax dodging increases dramatically. We, thinking "well that's unexpected", change our opinion and reverse the law. Now lets say we're willing to do that with every law. Laws that don't do what they were expected to do are thrown away periodically, and if we learn something interesting, we use that information to create a better law the second time around.
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No! No! I will not massacre my children. Instead, I'll make them corpulent on crappy mass-produced quarry bush biscuits and questionably grown mushroom alcohol, and then send them into the military when they turn 12...