Can elected governments not lead to revolution also? Can they not become corrupt? — Mr Phil O'Sophy
Perhaps people, even uneducated ones, may have some notion of the interests of themselves and their communities. And even educated people can be misled. Knowledge is distinct from wisdom. — Cuthbert
"But," you ask, "isn't public education (in the U.S.) already everything anyone would need to exercise their voting franchise in an informed and responsible manner?" Short answer: no! — tim wood
The second argument is that giving groups of people lesser voting rights is a provocative political act likely to lead to the kind of violence I hint at in the first para above. If we limit people's access to peaceful democratic decision-making then they will be liable to resort to unpeaceful and undemocratic means of redress. From the serfs of Russia to the suffragettes we can see this process. Shut me up, I will kick. And I will be justified in doing so because I have been given lesser rights to object by more peaceful means. — Cuthbert
It would be absurd. Over to me to say exactly why and it's definitely a weakness in my position on this thread. — Cuthbert
Consequently I'm in favour of reducing the voting age to at least 14, possibly 12. — Pseudonym
The arguments against votes-for-children that I can think of are echoes of the same arguments used against votes for women, Black people in South Africa etc — Cuthbert
Obviously, many of these issues are an all-or-nothing case (as I believe were some of the issues in our other discussion). Removing child labour laws without changing anything else would be a disaster for children, allowing them to be treated as adults in court without changing our punitive system would be cruel. But I do think some changes are possible within the society we have. Allowing children to vote is one such change, allowing them to work in very strictly controlled types of job is another I would be in favour of, for example. — Pseudonym
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