• queermunist she/her
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    7 hours ago

    Why are you applying this fuzzy logic to democracy when democracy, itself, does not? If one candidate gets 49% of the vote and the other gets 51% of the vote then the candidate with the most votes wins. Nothing fuzzy about it. If we apply liberal democracy’s logic to itself then a country that isn’t at least 50% democratic can not be called a democracy.

    • scratchee@feddit.uk
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      6 hours ago

      Because democracy is not the best way to solve every problem.

      The messy job of squeezing entire countries into a handful of words is fraught enough without throwing away up to half of the information.

      As a more amusing answer: Dictatorships throw away 99.9% of the opinions, so should we let one arsehole decide which countries are called a dictatorship?

      • queermunist she/her
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        2 hours ago

        I only said to apply the logic of liberal democracy to itself, not to apply it to all countries.

        I think your insistence on using a fuzzy spectrum to define concrete terms results in words not meaning anything at all. The “99% monarchy 1% democracy” gets to call itself a democracy by your fuzzy logic because it has democratic elements. That’s clearly not a good heuristic. There must be a point where the antidemocratic elements in a society disqualify it from being a democracy.