MikeNovack wrote: ↑Sat Apr 18, 2026 10:40 pm
IC, how can you speak of a "party" and at the same time claim not to understand my term "group"
"Party" is a subcategory of "group," i.e. "a group formed for political reasons." But neither of them has a vote. Under democracy, the votes are attached to individuals, not to groups of any kind, including parties.
We may be differing on how far down we demand democracy. I might not consider JUST the voters deciding between the candidates of these two parties enough.
Well, if you allow groups to vote as groups, then we're talking about quite a different political arrangement than simple democracy -- something indirect and collective, not "democratic."
In Israel, last time I checked, I think there were about 8 parties. This creates a system in which every vote results in a minority party ruling, because any party has to form coalitions with the non-majority parties in order to assemble enough votes to rule. This is one advantage of a two-party system: that it brings one closer to pure majoritarianism, even if one doesn't always reach the 51% line. The cost of the two-party system, of course, is that it limits the options one can vote for.
But then again, democracy isn't an
idealistic system that promised perfection, either in human beings themselves or in political arrangements: it's a pragamatic one, one that assumes a less-that-perfect scenario and accomodates that.
Which is why it's the "worst system
except for every other system," as Churchill is alleged to have pointed out.