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The idea of a test is problematic from yet
another point of view. Even before we talk about conflicting values, who determines what are the essential issues that the country faces? Is it security? (questions on Lebanon, The Golan, etc.) Is it economics? (questions on unemployment, budget deficit, taxes?) Is it religion? (fill it in yourselves...) And what is the fate of a person that knows definitely about unemployment, because he has no job and wants one, but doesn't know where the Golan is? Does this mean his vote is unimportant? So will he need to know a minimum on all the subjects? Or to know one subject very deeply? For example, isn't it so that the fact that so many people voted for Shas tells us something about how bad our education system deals with the poor? Did we know before this voting that the problem with the existing system is THAT big? Popular voting is a strong tool to identify problems before they explode. If you can come with a better one - that's interesting. So, perhaps one of the central merits of democracy is its ability to take all these tiny bits of knowledge and opinions, spread in the heads of millions of people, and make out of it some meaningful list of the important issues for the future of the country. |
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