sida1049
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2013
- Messages
- 926
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2015
There is no difference between action and inaction. An act by omission is still an act. You still don't quite understand the problems with your arguments after all that, which surprises me, because your eloquence isn't representative of your rationality. The numbers in my previous post speak for themselves, and you refuse the severe absurdity of what you're suggesting.There's a different between committing an act (changing something), and omitting to commit an act (not changing it). This vote was out for a Change. If the majority did not vote for a change (regardless if they didn't vote or they voted no), then it shouldn't change. Law reform comes about when the majority want the change (meaning they seek it - obviously if someone doesn't care they are neither seeking out the change or opposing it.
The reason why no one adopts your view of legislation is because it is ill-defined. It means that depending on how we phrase the question (and assuming the voting population is perfectly rational), the same issue that is voted on will lead to different results, and this is unacceptable, because problems should be ideally independent of its phrasing (the same problem should be expressed positively or negatively with equivalence). You are saying this: legalising SSM requires >50% affirmation of the voting population, and since we only have 48% of affirmation the opposite must take place. But according to your same logic, if we instead give the question of whether we should not legalise SSM, and assuming our voting population is the same, we'll only get 30% affirmation, so the opposite must take place. This is a contradiction. Choosing to act and choosing not to act are the same thing. You can't claim that there is a fundamental difference in one of the options without also bearing the various severe contradictions.
Yes you are. Read the first sentence you've written again. You're automatically grouping the other 20% of the voting population as not seeking change. Sure, you sugarcoated with "actively" in there, but that doesn't change that you've decided to label that entire group of people as "not seeking change". If you want to be correct, you should simply say that we don't know about the 20%. And even if you want to claim that they are not for "yes" (which obviously isn't completely true), then equivalently you would also need to make the claim that they are not for "no", and you end up nowhere.Again, I'm not saying the non-voters are no voters, I'm saying that yes voters were the only ones actively seeking the change.
I am not assuming the non-voters' stance, I am saying that under half the population WANT (not if they don't care) the legislation to pass.
Sure, but no matter what data set you're working with, there are always measurement errors. But even if we take into account the measurement errors here (which, of course, are largely based on anecdotal evidence) and increase the standard error, we still end up with statistical significance. In fact, if we increase the standard error to an absurdly and unreasonably high number, the impact on our current result will be negligible, and we can still safely and validly infer that the other 20% of the voting population would have voted "yes", if they had voted correctly.This is ALSO overlooking the fact that the vote wasn't even well-regulated (with people not receiving theirs, some people taking more than one vote etc.)
Honestly dude, I don't really know what to say at this point.