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Full Idea
In a referendum you ask everyone to vote on a subject that usually only a few know anything about.
Gist of Idea
A referendum result arises largely from ignorance
Source
David van Reybrouck (Against Elections [2013], 4 'remedies')
Book Ref
Reybrouck,David van: 'Against Elections', ed/tr. Waters,Liz [Bodley Head 2016], p.124
A Reaction
Tell me about it! I was forced to vote in the 2016 Brexit referendum, and felt thoroughly out of my depth on such a complex economic question.
20086 | Nowadays sovereignty (once the basis of a state) has become relative [Reybrouck] |
20085 | Democracy is the best compromise between legitimacy and efficiency [Reybrouck] |
20089 | Technocrats may be efficient, but they lose legitimacy as soon as they do unpopular things [Reybrouck] |
20090 | Today it seems almost impossible to learn the will of the people [Reybrouck] |
20087 | There are no united monolothic 'peoples', and no 'national gut feelings' [Reybrouck] |
20088 | Technocrats are expert managers, who replace politicians, and can be long-term and unpopular [Reybrouck] |
20093 | In the 18th century democratic lots lost out to elections, that gave us a non-hereditary aristocracy [Reybrouck] |
20091 | Representative elections were developed in order to avoid democracy [Reybrouck] |
20094 | You don't really govern people if you don't involve them [Reybrouck] |
20095 | A referendum result arises largely from ignorance [Reybrouck] |