y66, on 2019-March-05, 06:48, said:
A very interesting article perhaps leadnig to discussion. I think he might be oversimplifying. Take:
Quote
It is true that policymaking requires expertise. But I don't think members of the public are demonstrating ignorance when they claim that drug prices are too high, taxes could be fairer, privacy laws are too weak and monopolies are too coddled.
Others remind us that the United States is a democratic republic, not a direct democracy, and that the Constitution was designed to modulate the extremes of majority rule. Majorities sometimes want things — like bans on books, or crackdowns on minorities — that they should not be given.
Ok, he says majorities should sometimes get their way, and sometimes not. Polls can be tricky. If you ask people whether the rich should pay more taxes, they will say yes. They will always say yes. If you ask someone who is pretty well off but not rich whether s/he him/herself should pay more taxes, s/he will probably say no. But people needing help will disagree with him/her. I have no quarrel with the amount of taxes I pay, I might quarrel with how some of it is spent. I'm not sure about privacy laws. I stay off of Facebook, I consider that a no-brainer, but I am not sure what this privacy point is referring to. As to immigration, I guess I think it's a problem if eleven million people are here illegally. If you poll people, asking if children should be separated from parents if they are caught crossing the border illegally, a clear majority will say no. If you ask if any parent caught illegally crossing the border with a child should then be allowed to stay, I think a majority would also say no.
I would like every kid to have a bike, to have two parents guiding him/her, and to be within walking distance of a decent public school. I strongly suspect a large number of people agree with this and I think it would solve a lot of problems. How to promote it is another matter.
An added note about privacy. Because of the revised tax laws, my medical deductions, as well as other deductions, are now replaced by the standard deduction. So I no longer have to explain which doctors I go to how often, how far I drive to get there, what medicines I might take, and so on. Not that I think anyone is keeping a list, but I always found that a little personal.