2014-06-04

mindstalk: (Enki)
Slapdash post, from a comment I made elsewhere:

Eh, there's tradeoffs. I actually live under STV for Cambridge (MA USA) city election; having to rank 9-25 candidates can be a real cognitive pain, I find. (There's 9 seats, so you have to rank at least that many to have a full voice, and we had 25 candidates last election.) And 9 seats from a district means a threshold of at least 11% for a faction to get a distinct voice; if a group is spread evenly as 8% around the country, too bad.

Conversely, closed party list might as well be proxy voting for the party leaders, save for the dim possibility of revolt, and open part list gives you some control over specific candidates but you're still voting for a party group, not make-your-own-list in STV. Much simpler to vote for though, pick a candidate or party, bam you're done.

And thing is, STV extracts a lot more information from you but doesn't do much with it, since all that ranking precision just controls how your vote trickles through the count, without making things that much more representative in the end. To invoke math, ranking 25 candidates means 25! (factorial) or 1e25 possibilities, but the final result is simply choosing 9 out of 25, which is a much smaller number (2 million, or 2e6). Conversely, party list converts a simple vote directly into a party percentage.

And frequent referendums a la Swiss democracy would give me much more direct influence on the laws that pass, for still far less work than ranking 25 candidates, most of whom won't win... Voting in 9 referenda has me picking out of 2^9 options, and there are 2^9 possible outcomes of 9 laws passing or failing. Again, the work involved is directly proportionate to the result achieved.
mindstalk: (Mami)
65 million Americans are on Medicaid. (Precise number is in PDF linked by the article.)

49 million are on Medicare.

So 36% of us are on one of two socialized insurance plans already.

Edit to add: plus 9 million in the NHS-like VA system, bringing Americans on government-run or -paid health care up to 39%. Granted the VA has some recently infamous flaws. Could get some more by counting Indians (but they get screwed) or government employees (but that might be indirect enough to not count.) 2.7 million federal employees, that's about 0.85% of the population, though dependents might take that to 2% of Americans getting government health care that way.

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