Suddenly
No Punting
Something else that crossed my mind, that the Grand Jury is an example of laypersons chosen by lot having some control of the executive branch in many states. Here, absent a waiver, you cannot be tried except by indictment.AmateurScientist said:Good points. Of course, I could argue that Congress is limited by the Supreme Court's decisions when its laws are challenged, but that is a tangent that I don't wish to explore at the moment.
My point about citizens and jury service is this. In my experience, which is purely anecdotal, on the whole, average, off-the-street jurors do a very good job of administering justice in their findings of fact. They usually try earnestly to apply principles of fairness and justness when deliberating and reaching their verdicts based on the law as explained to them, and as it applies to the evidence before them. They do this using their common sense, life experience, and guidance from the court. By and large, the jury system works remarkably well.
In theory, nice, in practice the grand jury does what the "advisors" tell them to do I'd ballpark at 99% of the time... it was generally big news when our grand jury no-true-billed someone and even then it was usually a case nobody got worked up over and the grand jury submission was half-baked (abusive husband needed killing or some such...)
I'd agree about petit juries in general, but also suggest two points, first that this isn't universal. Some juries just suck, but at least their influence is limited to a single case.
The second is that much of the effectiveness is a result of the restrictions placed on the jury, the serious anti-tampering laws, the careful instructions, the careful screening, use of strikes, and so on... I fear that such safeguards applied to a more open-ended legislative body would result in a large part of the power being wielded by those doing the screening...
I could answer by tautology, that the winner is by default the consensus best choice, and that would be probably the answer closest to my point. True aristocracy is impossible as a practical form of government, and the point of a Republic isn't to ensure the best as much as to allow for a fair choice. It is possible that no particular person could think a candidate is the very best, but that still this person could be the best choice overall seeing that he ranks the highest over more people... In fact, the more that large groups really dislike the people other groups most think is best, the further down the lists we would go to find who is, all in all, the best choice, and that person would be less likely to be any persons favorite...
Anyway, you don't really believe the people choose the best qualified persons to run government, do you?
Good move too, considering the opponent.
Come on, the electorate of Missouri chose a dead man for a Senate seat in 2000, knowing full well he was dead before the election.
Right, they aren't the best by the criteria you would chose, or that we would even agree that no sane particular person would choose, but if people think that fame or faith equals fitness, then that is what they think the best choice is, and therefore, as a matter of democracy they are the best choice...
California voters elected Sonny Bono's arm-candy widow with no qualifications related to governing (for that matter, Sonny Bono had none either) to represent them in the House. They also elected an actor/champion bodybuilder as their governor. Why? Because he's rich and famous and well-liked. For that matter, my state elected a deluded, meglomaniac cynical fundie as its chief jurist. In none of those cases did the people choose the best qualified person. I could go on and on with examples.
Heck, people could agree that the best choice is a random person... Even better, we could agree that the mass criteria is completely random, which would suggest that much government is already more in line with your proposal than maybe we realize.
Then again, maybe is isn't so far off. Putting yourself in such a position takes some ability, and a contest is a contest. Full contact politics based on image isn't a new concept, the only difference is that misinformation comes on TV rather than in pamphlets and word of mouth or stump speeches...
In elections big and small, usually the candidates who are best known win. Therefore, those who get elected tend to be those with the best marketing campaigns. Often, that means the one who spends the most on advertising wins. Modern election politics is much more like Madison Avenue advertising than White House or Capitol Hill governing or policy making.
That's hardly the kind of meritocracy I suspect even you agree the founders probably had in mind.
Is it worse to spew BS via 30 second hit ad or from the back of a train or while standing on a stump? Same crap, different century.
Only that as things are now, a person has to prove the ability to put themselves in a position to have all that money and support. All other things being equal, at least now people have exhibited some skill level that allowed them to win some kind of contest.
I fail to see how my suggestion is any worse.
Why is doing what the people want a bad thing?
It's not a democracy. It is just as much a republic as one in which the representatives as elected, rather than drafted. The only difference is in how they get chosen. It would involve much less pandering to constituents and special interests and governing by poll results, and much more using own's judgment and sense to fashion policy and to support or oppose the proposals of colleagues. The coalition building and tit for tat agreements that are inherent in politics would of course remain, as they probably should.
(nah... that is just restating a basic honest disagreement... rhetorical question... I think that distinction is pretty clear and could be more fairly stated but part of the argument is emotional as reflected below and I'll just stop babbling...)
More importantly, your "lottery kings" (play on "philosopher kings") are going to lack any pretense of legitimacy whatsoever. The cynic may poo-poo modern democratic elections, but it can't be denied that no matter the twisted mechanism, people are choosing their leaders ("media kings?"), even if it is because they were once on "The Love Boat."
The "lottery king" suffers from a big "who the heck are you?" problem. Legislative power tends to apply some sense of moral right and wrong, unlike a jury they decide what conduct should land people in the slam, whereas a jury just points out whether they think one person did something wrong as defined by people that we can at least say with a straight face we all chose... Removing that pretense is going to get weird when the first person goes to prison based on randomly chosen people...
The texts are not perfect, and some of the writing could have been clarified in retrospect, but it's hardly the same as guessing what Jesus really meant.
AS
Not the same, just in a rough sense I am of the opinion that most people (me included) tend to use both (usually unconsciously) to legitmize their own beliefs. For example, the born-again would be likely to believe Jesus thinks marijuana is bad, where the more laid back new age christian would believe that Jesus would be down with getting high... Over on SC some time ago I posited the concept of "Red Jesus" vs. "Blue Jesus" to illustrate that (as in Red v. Blue states)... I still wonder if I got the idea somehwere else... I think the search function is screwed or I'd link to it...
Likewise, people in politics do the same. The framers belived in the will of the people. The framers were distrustful of democracy... a person develops an idea of "what the framers really meant" largely informed by their own ideas, same vague concept as an ink blot test...
Jesus is mallable because all accounts are vague and not easily applied to modern times... The framers are likewise even though they are somewhat more on point and applicable... it is just that there are so darn many of them and they were rarely if ever in total agreement... Ever read Crosskey's "Politics and The Constitution?" It's a somewhat compelling and sourced argument about "what the framers really meant" It's at 90 degree angles to pretty much every commonly held position. Manages to be wildly conservative while also cutting federalism off at the knees... Weird stuff, largely ignored these days as radical and somewhat because of his unconventional method of relying on the personal papers of certain framers...
I'd agree they aren't equal, as some framer-babble can be strongly discreditied via research as there is greater material to draw from. I'm more claiming that the basic concept of using them to represent one's own ideas is similar.
Yeah... I think this is too long too. Sorry.....