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The Breakdown of Democracy by Elevating Technologies
Before People:
polling, baggage screening machines, National Missile Defence
system
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Nipawin -Monday, November 5, 2001 - by: Mario deSantis |
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"Policies, not opinion polls"
--Lord Roy Hattersley, former UK labour deputy leader
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"Technological progress is like an ax in the hands of a
pathological criminal"--Albert Einstein
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"The system [National Missile Defence system] would offer
little protection and would do grave harm to this nation's core security interests"--
Federation of American Scientists
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opinion
polls
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Today's information technology has broken down our geographical differences and we
have been experiencing real time information from all over the world. As a consequence,
global leadership have been hailing the informational technological changes as providing
a better democratic environment. It is for this reason that we are all flooded with
statistical opinion polls telling us what we really want at any given time: 'black
today, white tomorrow.' This is called instant democracy, democracy driven by opinion
polls, and it is no wonder that politicians don't walk their talk and make social
policy decisions based on our instant democracy: daily statistical opinion polls
with a confidence interval of 99% and a maximum error of 1%. |
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fallacy
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I get so mad when social policy decisions are made based on statistical polls and
spin-doctored by emphasizing the high confidence in the decision and the small related
maximum error. The fallacy of this statistical decision making process is highlighted
when at a later time we hear the saying 'the decision was the best decision at the
right time and right place.' Instead, we must make social policy decisions based
on our shared democratic vision so that these decisions are right over a longer time
period and over all the places. This is democracy, democracy of people, and we don't
want the breakdown of democracy by elevating technologies and instant polling before
people. |
technology
before
people
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It was two days ago that in relation to the possible federalization of aviation baggage
screeners I heard U.S. House Representative John Mica saying that people are as good
as the technology they use. Again, we have social policy makers putting technology
before people and this is why we have a divided world and this is why governments
fail in their social responsibilities to protect their citizens. Things are precipitating
for the worse for humanity as President George Bush is pursuing at this time of crisis
his dream of a Star War by promoting the National Missile Defence system. |
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hope
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As long as there is life there is hope, for me, for all of us, and for President
Bush. |