Ceist, do you consider yourself to be one of the masses or are you that bit better than the rest of us? Putting things to the masses by the way is the fundamental essence of democracy! The alternatives are not appealing!
What's not appealing about a representative democracy? You live in one!
I said, the alternatives are not appealing!
and the alternative is that in a representative democracy our elected govt makes such decisions on our behalf
I don’t like referenda. I think that they are little removed from mob rule.
This referendum typifies what they are a bad idea.
A 75% majority of both houses and a signature from the President should be what is required to change the constitution.
so-crates I agree about your points on the campaign but the problem with an election such as this is that for every 1 educated voter who has spent time getting to know what they will be voting on there are another 3 (possibly more!) voters who don't listen to debates, read up on it, or bother doing anything to educate themselves on it other than read a few headlines, posters or listen to the likes of Joe Duffy and then go with whichever scenario sounds most convincing. Course you could probably say that about most elections but on one as complex as this I think it's asking for trouble putting it to the masses.
Ceist, do you consider yourself to be one of the masses or are you that bit better than the rest of us?
And do you honestly believe some hairdresser voting to prevent her son fighting for Europe against Iraq has really spent time researching the basis for this fear in the treaty?
and the alternative is that in a representative democracy our elected govt makes such decisions on our behalf
This is a referendum to decide should our constitution be altered. Our representitive democracy allows/insists on this.
I actually have no problem with us loosing a commissioner for a few years.
And all the evidence from private systems world wide suggests that it leads to an devide of access between those who can afford to pay and those who cant.
And "some hairdresser" has every right to her/his opinion. Or do you want people to sit an examination on the treaty before they are allowed to vote?
There are 2 kinds of people in this world, those who are prepared to get up and give something back to their community and those who sit behind closed doors, never giving anything back and just take take take. Lisbon is asking us to give a little back, it's the right, proper and decent thing to do. I'm proud I voted Yes
Good, because we already got that when we signed up to the Nice Treaty.
What evidence? The French medical system is heavily privatised and the largest hospital in Sweden is listed on the stock exchange. Would you suggest these are poor models to emulate?
And if I told you I was going to vote No but then changed my mind because some bloke down the pub told me he heard everybody in Ireland was going to get a free Mini-Cooper from the German government if the treaty was passed, you'd say that was score one for democracy?
t is impossible to assume everyone voting is in a position to study the treaty carefully, leaving the whole thing wide open to scaremongering on both sides. Including yourself with allegations of sinister Mr. Burns-type industrialists dictating our health policy if we vote Yes.
That's why I agree with the other posters that these decisions should (like all other EU countries) be decided by our elected representatives
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