1) Do any of the front runners vote? I, the main fronter, do.
2) Do you have in-house elections? Nope. It's pseudo-anarchy here.
3) Would any of the front runners ever consider running for public office? Who? We have stated before that if Katherine was president she'd clean up the economic mess. ;) But no, everyone who has ever wanted a political career doesn't want one here.
4) Would it bother any of the front runners to live in a country where there was no voting? If people live in a country with no voting, would it be strange to move to one where voting was the norm? Most people don't come from a representative system of government. But most like the theories of the idea, then bitch a lot about how people are doing it wrong.
5) What was the last issue the front runners had a strong opinion about? Hmm, probably the economy... and local issues. The issues we really care about never make it into our elections.
generally speaking, we all do (well, once per body, but everyone interested tends to be able to reach consensus with the others as to how to vote).
2) Do you have in-house elections?
nope. we waffle between consensus and anarchy.
3) Would any of the front runners ever consider running for public office? Who?
when i/we were little, we wanted to be the first black female president, but the realities of public office make it a much less enticing option. i'm sure there might be a time when someone inside would be willing to consider it, but it's unlikely for oh so many reasons. if we believed that idealism could survive public office, we might go for it, though.
4) Would it bother any of the front runners to live in a country where there was no voting? If people live in a country with no voting, would it be strange to move to one where voting was the norm?we have a hard enough time living in a state without open primaries (where you can vote whether or not you're registered with a party) and
( ... )
1) Do any of the front runners vote? Only all of us. We wait on these things until we've decided these things as a group, thinking collectively as opposed to only individually.
2) Do you have in-house elections? No. Not enough borders between us for this to be effective whatsoever. As mawrter described it, "we waffle between consensus and anarchy."
3) Would any of the front runners ever consider running for public office? Who? Thought about becoming a lawyer/politician for a long time, but are really not in a together place enough at all to do this within the next twenty years. You can't help the world when you still need help yourself.
4) Would it bother any of the front runners to live in a country where there was no voting? If people live in a country with no voting, would it be strange to move to one where voting was the norm? Yes. We probably couldn't live in a place where there was no voting. A cooperative system is the only one we can function in, even if it's as imbalanced as America's.
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2) Do you have in-house elections? Nope. It's pseudo-anarchy here.
3) Would any of the front runners ever consider running for public office? Who? We have stated before that if Katherine was president she'd clean up the economic mess. ;) But no, everyone who has ever wanted a political career doesn't want one here.
4) Would it bother any of the front runners to live in a country where there was no voting? If people live in a country with no voting, would it be strange to move to one where voting was the norm? Most people don't come from a representative system of government. But most like the theories of the idea, then bitch a lot about how people are doing it wrong.
5) What was the last issue the front runners had a strong opinion about? Hmm, probably the economy... and local issues. The issues we really care about never make it into our elections.
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generally speaking, we all do (well, once per body, but everyone interested tends to be able to reach consensus with the others as to how to vote).
2) Do you have in-house elections?
nope. we waffle between consensus and anarchy.
3) Would any of the front runners ever consider running for public office? Who?
when i/we were little, we wanted to be the first black female president, but the realities of public office make it a much less enticing option. i'm sure there might be a time when someone inside would be willing to consider it, but it's unlikely for oh so many reasons. if we believed that idealism could survive public office, we might go for it, though.
4) Would it bother any of the front runners to live in a country where there was no voting? If people live in a country with no voting, would it be strange to move to one where voting was the norm?we have a hard enough time living in a state without open primaries (where you can vote whether or not you're registered with a party) and ( ... )
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Only all of us. We wait on these things until we've decided these things as a group, thinking collectively as opposed to only individually.
2) Do you have in-house elections?
No. Not enough borders between us for this to be effective whatsoever. As mawrter described it, "we waffle between consensus and anarchy."
3) Would any of the front runners ever consider running for public office? Who?
Thought about becoming a lawyer/politician for a long time, but are really not in a together place enough at all to do this within the next twenty years. You can't help the world when you still need help yourself.
4) Would it bother any of the front runners to live in a country where there was no voting? If people live in a country with no voting, would it be strange to move to one where voting was the norm?
Yes. We probably couldn't live in a place where there was no voting. A cooperative system is the only one we can function in, even if it's as imbalanced as America's.
5) What was the last issue the front ( ... )
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