I think we would agree that just because a reform won’t fix everything doesn’t count as a reason not to do it. I suppose you’re simply saying that better voting methods will only cause a mild improvement in governance, not a major improvement. But I would argue that the characteristics of political institutions are a major explanation for why things like horrendous human rights violations sometimes do or don’t happen.
If you think that genocide is an improvement then you’re holding on to your idea way too tightly. You need to read posts before replying. Having a “the titanic will never sink mentality” is going to kill the idea before you publish anything.
I think we would agree that just because a reform won’t fix everything doesn’t count as a reason not to do it. I suppose you’re simply saying that better voting methods will only cause a mild improvement in governance, not a major improvement. But I would argue that the characteristics of political institutions are a major explanation for why things like horrendous human rights violations sometimes do or don’t happen.
If you think that genocide is an improvement then you’re holding on to your idea way too tightly. You need to read posts before replying. Having a “the titanic will never sink mentality” is going to kill the idea before you publish anything.