Interesting Links for 05-05-2017
May. 5th, 2017 12:18 pm- Live streaming your life - threat or menace?
- I "love" how they trotted out the "And of course you can livestream bad things!" and "Kids - don't forget that streaming video of yourself isn't the same as having friends!"
Also, people seem to have forgotten that people have been doing this kind of thing since the late 90s...
(tags: video life money ) - Labour eyes proportional representation as party's elections minister backs voting shake-up
- (tags: proportional_representation voting labour uk )
- Most US homes have mobiles but no landline
- (tags: phones usa )
- Sail from Britain to Japan in 20 days thanks to global warming
- (tags: globalwarming arctic shipping )
- After years of warnings, mobile network hackers exploit SS7 flaws to drain bank accounts
- (tags: security phones banking OhForFucksSake )
- Carly Simon plays You're So Vain's lost verse
- (tags: music history )
no subject
Date: 2017-05-05 02:41 pm (UTC)These are examples of something I've been assured is a general rule of politics: Policies will only be advocated by parties which benefit by them. Only parties out of power would benefit by PR; parties in power would not. Therefore PR will never be backed by anyone with the power to enact it, and thus it will never be enacted.
Sounds like an airtight argument, which leaves only one question unanswered:
How did other countries get PR, then?
no subject
Date: 2017-05-05 03:18 pm (UTC)I think other countries largely ended up with PR because the UK told them they had to have it.
no subject
Date: 2017-05-05 04:00 pm (UTC)I don't think so, because that already happened with the Conservatives. The Lib Dems were in an ideal spot to demand PR, and they funked it, getting only a referendum on AV (which is not PR) which the Cons didn't back anyway, and which lost.
"I think other countries largely ended up with PR because the UK told them they had to have it."
Huh?? What? When? How? Here's a list of countries with PR. When and how would the UK have told the entirety of Latin America, a number of African countries that were never British colonies, and half the former Soviet Union that they had to have PR?
no subject
Date: 2017-05-05 04:16 pm (UTC)I tend to believe they have learned their lesson.
As for the British involvement in the adoption of PR I think as part of our role in post-WW2 European reconstruction and post-colonial administrations in Africa we normalised the idea that when you are setting up a new country or a new constitution you use PR. We're certainly not the only influence but I think we've played an influential role - probably by accident - by helping to establish a norm.
The other influence I think (and probably the reason why the British encouraged PR in parts of the world we used to control) is that PR is a good way to mediate shared power arrangements in polities with potential for political violence - like Europe or Africa or Latin America or other places. I think one of the reasons lots of the world has PR and the UK doesn't is that the UK has not (yet) suffered a complete breakdown of the the nation-state through internal revolution or losing an existential war. When you are recovering from that sort of national disaster you need to accomodate lots of different views in order for your state to be legitimate - so you pick a PR voting system.
no subject
Date: 2017-05-05 04:32 pm (UTC)As for the new-nation/revolution/war theory, that doesn't always apply either. Sweden has PR. Finland has PR. Iceland has PR. Switzerland has PR. New Zealand has PR, and only got it a few decades ago. Even the countries that did get rampaged by WW2, I don't think all of them revamped their entire constitutions at that time, and if I had time to look up when they got PR, it might not have been then.
no subject
Date: 2017-05-05 05:07 pm (UTC)Which makes it a shame that the Conservatives are likely to do so well at the next election!