Annachie wrote:Thirdly, I think Starship Troopers had it correct vis citizenship.
And that has issues too. The novel never spells out whether there are avenues not related to military service that open the way to full voting citizenship (In fact, it makes it pretty clear that there aren't). And then you'll have to confront the fact that, on the whole, members or ex-members of the military are no more capable of making decisions for society than anyone else; Military service is not designed to make one more aware of political issues. If anything, it's designed to instill an instinctive deference to authority, and that's one of the least useful traits someone voting in a democracy could have. How many leaders have we seen throughout history that got to their exalted positions by displaying personal charisma which is mistaken for leadership ability?
And even if you correct this blatant flaw, what exactly counts as doing "public service"? Who controls that? Why would the people working those jobs get the automatic seal of approval?
I'll repeat what I said the previous times this has come up: Unlimited voting franchise is a feature, not a bug. Taking away the vote is something that should be done only when the prospective voter has demonstrated that they aren't capable of making those decisions, it should not be taken away by such technicalities as "do you work the right job" or "do you pay enough taxes", because all of those things can and WILL be abused.