Posted by
Manatee Libertarian on Wednesday, December 31, 2008 11:14:52 AM
Recently I was listening to a political talk show on the radio and the
speaker was talking about the evils of gerrymandering congressional
districts. I had to laugh a bit because he was attempting to assert
that only the GOP does this, and that the DNC
was completely innocent of such shenanigans. Lets forget who is at
fault for a moment, and focus on the solutions. It should not surprise
you that some very elegant solutions exist, technical solutions. Upon
investigating this issue one discovers that technology is not the
problem, but politicians are.
The root problem is that neither
side wants to play fair. This is a war, so all is fair, right? Wrong.
This is not a war. In a war it's perfectly acceptable to kill your
opponents. In American politics it is illegal, and more importantly, a
social taboo, to kill your opponents. Ours is a great debate. And with
this in mind the only thing stopping us from using a technological
solution is ourselves.
Let me explain what I mean by
technological solution. The basic problem is one of geographically
mapping population to physical districts. There are a great deal of
very potent mathematical algorithms that could be applied. The data
exists. Every 10 years the United States Census Bureau counts all the
people, and where they live. It is almost a trivial thing to go from
this data to congressional districts by use of any number of systems.
This would remove the politician from the process, and thus the catch.
They
want their hands in the pie. They see the districts as their personal
pie. They pretend to be offended at gerrymandering, but in truth they
embrace it at every turn and only complain when it seems to work
against them.
But math does not care about any political
ideology. Math is without bias. The algorithm chosen would be made
public. The census data fed into it would be made public. Then anyone
who ever wanted too could validate the output and verify that the
districts rendered are proper. This removes all the hanky panky.
While
it is true that, likely, the average person does not immediately grasp
the finer details of any such mechanical approach, it is ultimately
unimportant for enough people exist that do understand the minutia that
all sides can verify to their satisfaction that the process has been
executed fairly. And in the end this is what our goal should be,
unbiased and fairly distributed districts that represent a cross
section of geography and population.
This will still render some
districts as leaning in one direction or another, but it will not be
done with politicians intention, rather it will happen by the natural
groupings that people form when they exercise their right of free
association.
More importantly, this will require politicians to
hone their skills when it comes time to participate in the great
debate. The concept of a safe district will be less sure, and will
require incumbents and challengers to better understand and appeal to
those people they wish to represent.
There is technical no
reason why the same processes cannot be used at all levels, precinct,
city, county, state an national. The only thing standing between fair
districts and you, are your representatives. Why not do something about
it?