Seraph wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:Seraph wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:A prime example of "tyranny of the majority" is when the majority votes to deprive gays the right to marry, or blacks and whites the right to intermarry.
Many such problems have been fixed via constitutional amendments. How do constitutional amendments come about? That's right: a majority vote. Damn that tyranny of the majority.
Generally, Constitutions usually require much more than a simple majority vote.
I was not referring to simple majorities. My preference is for decision-making via majority (of any sort, as long as it is a majority) vote rather than a minority, even if that means the decision is in my view totally wrong.
Coito ergo sum wrote:Moreover, many such problems are not fixed by majority vote, because many times the majority is in favor of the status quo. That's the point.
If the majority of voters believes that the status quo is preferable to change that is a
decision it makes. Again, it is preferable to decision-making by a minority. The last referendum in Australia - whether to become a republic - has been decided by popular vote in the negative. I happen to be against having a titular head of government whose title as such is hereditary, who lives on the other side of the world and only visits our nation for a few days once every two or three decades, but so be it. No matter how much I disagree with the decision of a majority, I prefer the principle of decision-making by a majority over decision-making powers by a minority.
Well that depends. The tyranny of the majority can occur, like was pointed out by Lani Guinier in her book "Tyranny of the Majority," along racial lines, in which the majority might want separate water fountains, and schools that exclude blacks.
The reason it's easy to rely on majorities today is that the world was able to realize certain immutable principles - like equal protection under the law and freedom of speech - that are decided on an individual level, and not a majority vote level. If everything is up for a majority vote, then that means that whether someone gets a fair trial is up to the whim and vicissitude of the mob. Most societies in the west have evolved to a point where most people - the majority - would never want to deny someone a fair trial or equal protection of the laws and so we feel comfortable with the majority. However, gays in many places are suffering the tyranny of the majority because they can't get equal rights to marry.
The idea of having any rights in the first place - the whole basis for the UN Declaration on Human Rights, for example, is that that those are things the majority can't just take away from you.
It's like when Hitchens said, "My own opinion is enough for me, and I claim the right to have it defended against any consensus, any majority, anywhere, any place, any time. And anyone who disagrees with this can pick a number, get in line and kiss my ass."
"Be It Resolved: Freedom of Speech Includes the Freedom to Hate," debate at University of Toronto, (2006-11-15). Hitchens argued the affirmative position. Info here; video here.
That's what it means - the majority can't tell a minority of ONE that he can't hold an opinion, and no consensus, no majority, anywhere, anyplace, anytime, can take that away. If you disagree with that , you can pick a number, get in line and kiss his, and my, ass.
