Evolving Collective Intelligence by Tom Atlee

Exploring how to generate the collective wisdom we need

Exploring how to generate the collective wisdom we need

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Candida International

What Does MHRA Stand For??

Bono and Bush Party without Koch: AIDS Industry Makes a Mockery of Medical Science

Profit as Usual and to Hell with the Risks: Media Urge that Young Girls Receive Mandatory Cervical Cancer Vaccine

 

Health Supreme

Vitamin A and D - Synergy and Balance

Canadians Defeat Government Natural Health Proposal - NewsGrabs 20 July 2008

Seizure inducing aspartame added to anti-seizure drugs

 

Share The Wealth

Think It Can't Happen Here? Think Again! - Bills C-51 & C-52

We Are The Government And We Are Here To Protect You! Bills C-51 & 52

C-51 Policy Statement - Canadian Natural Health Coalition

C-51 The Real Facts Vs the Bull From Health Canada

Another Health Canada Horror Story - C-51& C-52

 

Consensus

La prevenzione? Quasi una malattia

Ah già, Tienanmen

Quel carrozzone della FAO: la fame nel mondo non si batte col foie gras

Vaccino antipapilloma HPV: stupro sanitario.

La responsabilità personale? Un pensiero sovversivo.

 

Diary of a Knowledge Broker

Giving It Away, Making Money

Greenhouses That Change the World

Cycles of Communication and Collaboration

What Is an "Integrated Solution"?

Thoughts about Value-Add

May 19, 2005

New Voting System in British Columbia Wins and Loses

Categories

The citizens of British Columbia have voted May 17th on the recommendations made by last year's Citizens Assembly on Electoral Reform -- one of the most remarkable initiatives in deliberative democracy I've seen. (I promoted it in my article Using Citizen Deliberative Councils to Make Democracy More Potent and Awake) 57% of the population were in favor of the Citizens Assembly's innovative "single transferable vote" idea (a combination of instant runoff voting and proportional representation) -- and it was approved by a majority in 77 of 79 legislative districts. However, the legislation establishing the Citizens Assembly required a 60% supermajority. So now the debate begins over whether the majority should rule or not! Here are the vote tallies and an article from the Vancouver Sun. Personally I'm disappointed and surprised that this referendum did not win more resoundingly. I would love to know more about the media debate and advertising campaigns that preceded the elections. If you have more information, please post a comment.

 


posted by Tom Atlee on Thursday May 19 2005
updated on Saturday September 24 2005

URL of this article:
http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/tom_atlee/2005/05/19/new_voting_system_in_british_columbia_wins_and_loses.htm

 


Related Articles

Protect Sources or Not? - More Complex than It Seems
Should the media and the legal system protect unethical powerholders who illegally leak information as part of their power manipulations? If they are protected, doesn't that degrade democracy? If they are exposed, wouldn't that make ethical whistleblowers less likely to leak vital information to the public, also degrading democracy? The answers to these questions play out differently in a polarized adversarial political environment and in a culture of dialogue... [read more]
July 16, 2005 - Tom Atlee

Citizens Juries to Choose Supreme Court Justices?!
My July 6 Washington Post headlines email contains this item: "Are a Nominee's Views Fair Game?": "White House and Senate Democrats headed toward a collision yesterday over the role ideology should play in the selection of the next Supreme Court justice, outlining a key conflict that could define the nomination battle over a successor to Justice Sandra Day O'Connor." There's more than meets the eye here...... [read more]
July 06, 2005 - Tom Atlee

A Spectrum of Politics and Governance Grounded in Empowered Citizen Dialogue and Deliberation
All forms of dialogue and deliberation serve our evolution into a culture of dialogue. Part of that evolution is the increased legitimacy and empowerment of forms that call forth more of society's collective intelligence and wisdom. As new forms of dialogue and deliberation demonstrate their effectiveness, they can be increasingly trusted by citzens and officials, and thus can (and should) become increasingly embedded in the institutions of social policy-making.... [read more]
July 04, 2005 - Tom Atlee

 


Readers' Comments


A quick search on on Feedster shows a bunch of other folks who were writing for and against the new system before the vote. http://feedster.com/search.php?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&limit=15&q=%22Citizens+Assembly+on+Electoral+Reform%22&sort=date

Posted by: Sepp Hasslberger on May 19, 2005 09:22 AM

 


A quick search on on Feedster shows a bunch of other folks who were writing for and against the new system before the vote. http://feedster.com/search.php?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&limit=15&q=%22Citizens+Assembly+on+Electoral+Reform%22&sort=date

Posted by: John Abbe on May 20, 2005 04:56 PM

 


A quick search on on Feedster shows a bunch of other folks who were writing for and against the new system before the vote. http://feedster.com/search.php?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&limit=15&q=%22Citizens+Assembly+on+Electoral+Reform%22&sort=date

Posted by: Chris Corrigan on May 21, 2005 11:55 AM

 


A quick search on on Feedster shows a bunch of other folks who were writing for and against the new system before the vote. http://feedster.com/search.php?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&limit=15&q=%22Citizens+Assembly+on+Electoral+Reform%22&sort=date

Posted by: John Fellowes on May 23, 2005 12:07 AM

 

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Diversity is possibility waiting to be born. So how can we use our differences most creatively?

 

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