In politics, when picking a side, people are most often dealing with a false dillema. You're anti-something or anti-someone, so you pick their opposition as your allies. The mentality is: "enemy of my enemy is my friend". Historically this led to pretty bad outcomes. Reject it.
Yeah, but math isn't science either, and the accuracy of math models depends on assumptions born out of actual data, which in this case look a lot like a bunch of anecdotes and wishful thinking. The more I read about this, the less impressed I am.
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The perfect is the enemy of the good enough. Cities in the states that actually implemented approval voting–Fargo and St Louis–had good outcomes and were happy with the results.
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Actually if you read about those specific models, you will see that they use 720 permutations of the five basic assumptions, and score voting won in 100% of them. Literally every single one. This actually strengthens the case.
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