Does My Vote Matter?
According to International IDEA, the United States has almost the lowest voter turnout in the world, ranked a measly 140 out of 163. Perhaps Americans are apathetic, or maybe they’re just concerned their vote is meaningless in the face of America's massive political machine. Can my vote really change the course of politics, or am I just a grain of sand on the massive beach of democracy?









Evidence Suggests That Voter Errors are Systematically Biased
Another interpretation of the data
To follow-up on my previous comment: We know that markets and votes yield different results. But we cannot say with certainty which of the results is the "correct" one, because we cannot know for sure what people really want. In fact, it is more likely that votes are correct and markets are biased, because people give more thought to their voting decisions than to their grocery shopping. When buying food, people don't consider all the factors they care about. When voting for farm subsidies, they consider more factors than when they go shopping. There are numerous debates in the media and civil society about voting. There are much fewer debates about shopping. Voters, as uninformed as they may be, are certainly more informed than shoppers.
So we should react to the difference between democracy and markets by joining the side of democracy, extending the range of things that are decided democratically and reducing the range of things that are decided through market channels.
- Kwiz
August 27, 2008 1:51PM
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