...If everybody voted, we'd have a representative government. Trouble is, many people share the same attitude as you do, and dont contribute to the process....
And yet again I point out that voting is not the only way to contribute.
It's not a "conspiracy", it's structural.
As far as every one voting being better... In Australia it is a crime not to vote. They have a voter turnout of around 90%. It Australia a liberal-democratic utopia? No. Even a brief inquiry into into the matter will show that their parliament deal with the same old stuff, and in the same old way as every other legislative body.
Thank you for your complaments, but even if I did vote (and there was someone worth voting for) it would be counteracted by some overly emotional, easily swayed, reactionary and possibly sociopathic voter for the other side. Who know?
So many decisions are not up for election. Do we get to vote on GM thowing 50,000 workers to the curb? No. Do we vote on the importation/export of toxic/radioactive material? No. There are millions of life changing decisions made every day that are simply beyond the scope of government.
As for people who died for democracy, our current "democracies" are the products of revolutionary struggles like the French, British and American revolutions. Do think that people that fought and died in order to form parliaments in the first place would be very happy to see how their legacy has developed over time (hijacked). We have countries run by the same type of wealth and privilege they feed to muskets and guillotines 200 years ago. Liberal democracy at its root IS revolutionary. I'm not some odd new radical, it is people with my views that made parliaments a reality to begin with. "It's better than nothing" or claiming that I don't care about the people who died for democracy are not valid points. The people who dies originally would not be very impressed with the people who encourage us to vote for the lesser of two or three evils.
If anyone doesn't believe me, read "Common Sense" my Thomas Payne THEN get back to me.
Thomas Jefferson thought that America should have a revolution every 10 years or so in order to clean out the established power. If you look at Canada and the US now you can see why.