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14:00
The legalese for this explicitly stated what things should happen in case of a YES majority.
Alternative Vote.
The United Kingdom alternative vote referendum, as part of the Conservative – Liberal Democrat Coalition Agreement drawn up after the 2010 general election, was a nationwide vote held on Thursday 5 May 2011 (the same date as local elections in many areas) to choose the method of electing MPs at subsequent general elections. The referendum concerned whether to replace the present "first-past-the-post" system with the "alternative vote" (AV) method. The proposal to introduce AV was rejected by the electorate. This was only the second UK-wide referendum to be held (the first being the EEC referendum...
ah
that old chestnut
user1804599
In NL after a non-binding referendum the government must accept or reject the outcome as-is "ASAP".
@R.MartinhoFernandes Not really.
the government didn't get such a massive turnout by telling people they could totally ignore the result
14:01
@Puppy I mean that they told the voters the opposite of that.
user1804599
Now 200 days later they are still abusing the ambiguity of the P in "ASAP" to fuck the voter.
oh ok
now I'm with tou
@rightfold 'reject' is the game theoretical best choice, unless it means 'commit to the opposite'.
You reject it right away and then proceed as you please.
user1804599
The referenda are for cancelling new laws.
user1804599
Reject means "don't cancel" and accept means "cancel".
user1804599
14:03
They can't amend the new law before accepting or rejecting or anything like that
That's "commit to the opposite".
And unless it's "don't cancel for a long time/forever", it's still optimal.
Choose "don't cancel" right now, decide to cancel next week.
Seems to some countries referendum means that it is exactly for directly changing things like the consitution
user1804599
it's called a "corrective referendum"
vOv depends apparently
but meh
@thecoshman The constitutions usually make explicit under which rules can a referendum be invoked.
14:06
either way, it should be clear when taking a poll if this is just "out of interest" or "this shit is real people, the results will have permanent effects"
@thecoshman In the official papers, it was.
But the campaigns were terribly misleading.
And Hameron having promised it to be "your decision" and then not actually making it so didn't help.
I'm sure that sort of shit is meant to be much more accountable than it really is :(
Is government bound by their campaign promises?
(And if so, what counts as a campaign promise? Just saying it on a pulpit doesn't seem very official)
Achievement unlocked: Used R.curry in javascript
user1804599
@sehe Is R Ramda?
Ven
Ven
14:10
use Sanctuary!
@rightfold yes
user1804599
lol JS
user1804599
length is the silliest name for counting number of formal parameters.
TIL vim does not come auto-installed on ubuntu
is vi standard-er or something
Ven
Ven
@AlexM. no but vi does
@thecoshman In Portugal the bindingness of any referendum depends on turnout. If there's a >50% turnout, then it's binding, otherwise no. To invoke a referendum you have state what the implications of the outcomes are, just in case it's binding.
user1804599
14:13
@R.MartinhoFernandes Does that make one group of voters refuse to vote so that the turnout is low, giving the other group of voters a higher percentage of votes.
yay I added an alias to my bashrc
I'm pretty much a guru now
@rightfold lol, maybe: none of the three referendums held in this republic had enough turnout.
Meanwhile I'm trying to learn docker on-the-fly for the new project at work...
user1804599
this happened with us
user1804599
but the turnout was still high enough so the fuckers pwned themselves
Ven
Ven
14:15
same
There's an older one held in 1933 with >90% turnout, but that was a referendum held after a military coup to approve a dictatorial constitution, so the results are questionable. (And in any case, it wasn't bound the rules of the current constitution)
user1804599
I wonder what turnout is in Belgian elections
user1804599
because they went full North-Korea and feature compulsory voting
@rightfold The first one had an appalling 32% turnout.
user1804599
Which was more than 30%.
14:17
No one gives a fuck about abortion, basically.
user1804599
Oh wait
user1804599
You are talking about yours
Right.
Oh, the threshold is 30% in the Netherlands?
@R.MartinhoFernandes well that makes sense
user1804599
We had 32% too. The law requires 30%. People cried "but the other 68% must also be heard!"
14:18
@thecoshman I don't know. It allows 25%+1 of the population to force a decision.
can you turn up and say "I don't care, but I want what ever people are happy with"
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's better than 1 person being able to make the decision
@thecoshman Just leave the ballot blank.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ok :D
user1804599
Blank and invalid ballots count towards turnout.
user1804599
"You cared enough to say you're indifferent"
14:19
In Portugal not invalid ones.
And blank votes are protest votes; they invalidate the election if they're the majority.
user1804599
there was this funny thing on tv
The way to express indifference is to not vote.
user1804599
for elections
user1804599
they asked a guy what he was gonna vote and he said he rather not disclose
user1804599
after voting they interviewed him again and he said he voted animal party XD
14:21
@R.MartinhoFernandes I would have thought it'd make more sense to have an expliacte "spoil vote" option
@thecoshman A spoilt vote usually means one that doesn't count. Like if you mark all the boxes in a single choice vote.
Or if you mark outside the boxes, etc.
I wish we had a "fuck this election" option
@R.MartinhoFernandes so, in a referendum to change the status quo the options are 'change status quo', 'maintain status quo', 'maintain status quo & fuck you for asking' then
user1804599
@jaggedSpire You can write it on the ballot
@rightfold I could, but I'm pretty sure that wouldn't contribute to a retry at the election
user1804599
14:24
lol
I know a blank one just doesn't count as a vote here
user1804599
btw when are potus elections
@LucDanton And technically also "1/2 a vote for youtube.com/watch?v=pWdd6_ZxX8c";, since not voting directly affects the result.
Tuesday
14:25
No, wait, not quite 1/2.
user1804599
> November 8
user1804599
interesting
A 100% YES result is still non-binding if only 49% voted.
Let's just say that it's an indeterminate fractional vote for youtube.com/watch?v=pWdd6_ZxX8c.
user1804599
What if exactly 50% voted?
@rightfold Tuesdays used to be market day back in the horse-and-cart era, IIRC. It made it easiest for everyone to vote. Naturally, they won't change it to make it easier for everyone to vote now.
14:26
@rightfold It's 50%+1.
user1804599
In NL you can't vote on Sundays.
user1804599
@R.MartinhoFernandes ok cool
user1804599
There is never an election or referendum on a Sunday.
In Portugal there is never one in any other day.
14:27
@rightfold WTF is that shit?
user1804599
The latest MEP elections were held on Thursday in NL whereas literally everyone else did them on Sunday.
@LucDanton Bon débarraz
user1804599
@wilx XD
@LucDanton Spreadsheet Wars 2
Lots of states do force companies to give workers a couple of hours off while the polls are open to give them the opportunity
14:28
(I do admit I had half a dozen myself)
If anybody brought this up to me as a thesis advisor, I would be like, "No!1, GTFO!!!!"
at any rate, I need to get to work
Elections here are usually Friday evening, Saturday morning.
toodle-oo
god that'd be nice
@thecoshman But being better than a fantasy worst case scenario isn't a great advantage, is it?
Why do people so often (sometimes unknowingly) force discussions of democratic processes into the old adage of "democracy is the best we have"?
The question isn't whether there are worse options, it's whether letting 25%+1 force a specific decision is something we want.
nwp
nwp
14:37
@R.MartinhoFernandes That is very misleading phrasing.
It is not the 25%+1 ruling caste making decisions, it is the 25%+1 who can be arsed to cast a vote.
@nwp What part of that phrasing gives an implication of "ruling caste"?
(And what's the "ruling caste" in a democracy if not the electorate? Isn't that the very definition of it, practical implementations aside?)
nwp
nwp
It sounds like 25%+1 force decisions on somewhat disagreeing 75%-1, implying undemocratic and bad, which is a narrative that you just criticized.
@nwp Oh. FWIW when I first put forth this proposition I prefaced it with "I don't know", because I really don't know where to stand on it, but I can see a case being made for both sides.
@R.MartinhoFernandes you are stating the worst case of 25%+1, what else can I do but compare that to the worst case of 1. Problem is, we can't force everyone to vote, but we don't want to allow decisions to be made with only a 'small' % of the people
where that happy middle ground is is a hard thing to answer
@nwp no... it's 100% of the people who bothered to vote...
nwp
nwp
@thecoshman I thought that middle ground has been found already. Vote for a party every 4 years to give the general direction and leave the details to them.
14:46
vOv it's the status que... not sure if it is good or not
@thecoshman The point is that having something worse is not sufficient to make it good (especially if that "worse" is so implausible).
I think we can all agree, the more people you have, the harder it is to get an agree solution
@R.MartinhoFernandes true
is @rightfold around? I need some help with Clojure
3
@thecoshman I'm firmly in the not-good camp, even if I can point out good things about it.
arguably though, if you presume 100% have a decent enough chance to vote, or at least those that don't are too small a % to make a difference, then simply who ever turns up to votes gets their voice heard, and if you don't turn up, you just have to accept the reuslts
@R.MartinhoFernandes Woud say it's 'bad' though?
14:50
@thecoshman But in fact in Portugal if enough people don't turn up to a referendum, not accepting the results is the result.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz hi
@R.MartinhoFernandes You certainly have to question a situation where voting against a measure could (even in theory) make it become law where it wouldn't have otherwise.
@thecoshman I also have issue with the often-implied assumption that one "just has to accept" a vote because it was a majority vote. It's the bandwagon fallacy.
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't think not turning up should be be a 'no' vote though
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz ask away
14:54
@R.MartinhoFernandes me to
Or the "you don't vote; you can't complain".
but I also don't like the fact you have to actively say yes, but can passively say no
Arguably, if you vote you have less legitimacy to complain because, well, you actively took part in the decision.
@rightfold @Ven I'm doing an excercise where I have to find a longest path in a tree. I store the tree in a 2D array:
(defn edges
    (atom
        (to-array-2d
            (repeat edge-count
                (repeat edge-count 0)
            )
        )
    )
)
Ven
Ven
them parens
user1804599
14:56
Why do you use an array?
user1804599
Arrays are a pain in Clojure.
to store edges
Ven
Ven
cuz he's badd
here's a sketch of my algorithm:
(defn longest [lookup-node entry-node len]
    (dotimes [n edge-count]
        (if (and (not= n entry-node) (not= n lookup-node))
            (if (pos? (aget edges lookup-node n))
                (longest n lookup-node (+ len 1))
            )
        )
    )
)
however, dotimes simply executes those things
what I'd like is to kinda map-reduce - go into each neighbour, and then get maximum of those recursive invocations
@JerryCoffin Right, that's even worse. If you think your options through, you have to guess turnout in order to not have your vote turned against you.
user1804599
14:57
(-> (range edge-count)
    (map (fn [n] ...))
    (reduce ...))
Any system that requires you to guess how others will vote in order to have your vote be worth it is broken.
@rightfold oh
what's -> ?
my reduce is gonna be (apply max), so p straighforward
user1804599
@rightfold oh great
so it's kinda like state monad
user1804599
Oh wait you should use ->>.
user1804599
14:59
-> inserts as first argument. ->> as last argument.
@R.MartinhoFernandes you maybe missed the point, If you don't like that result of a vote, but never voted against that decision, well, suck it up bitch, you had your chance to vote against it, you chose to just accept what ever result happened.
user1804599
So (->> x (f) (g a b) (h c)) expands to (h c (g a b (f x))).
VS Code gets rolled back from 1.7 because they accidentally DDoSed npmjs :D code.visualstudio.com/updates/v1_6#_17-rollback
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah--and unfortunately, most countries (of which I'm aware, anyway) use exactly such systems.
@JerryCoffin AFAIK it's all of them (ignoring the ones without elections at all, obviously)
15:01
so like that?
    (->>
        (range edge-count)
        (map fn [n]
            (if (and (not= n entry-node) (not= n lookup-node))
                (if (pos? (aget edges lookup-node n))
                    (longest n lookup-node (+ len 1))
                    0
                )
                0
            )
        )
        (apply min)
    )
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz pass @edges to longest instead of having longest dereference edges directly
user1804599
to make longest pure
@rightfold good idea
user1804599
right now your longest isn't deterministic either
@thecoshman Right that makes no sense to me.
user1804599
15:02
someone may change the value of edges while another thread is executing the longest loop
If I leave the decision up to you, and you guys make a bad decision, I don't have any qualms with calling you on it.
@R.MartinhoFernandes really?
@rightfold that doesn't matter here
@R.MartinhoFernandes Mostly anyway, yeah. There are, for example, a couple of US states that have at least some attempt at proportional representation systems that might help a little (but only inside those states, of course).
I don't feel confident enough to take the responsibility of the decision. By voting, you assert your responsibility. So I hold you responsible.
15:03
@R.MartinhoFernandes I think point still missed. Sort of... I see what you are saying. But the core idea is that you shouldn't wait till after the vote to say you think X should be done.
@thecoshman (Note that complaining about a bad decision is different from complaining about a decision different from the one I wanted)
You can of course reflect on it and say you think X was indeed a bad idea, even if you voted for it
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz yeah you can simplify it a bit
@R.MartinhoFernandes true enough
@rightfold hm so far it doesn't compile
give me a sec
user1804599
15:04
(->> (range edge-count)
     (map (fn [n]
       (if (and (not= n entry-node)
                (not= n lookup-node)
                (pos? (aget edges lookup-node n)))
         (longest n lookup-node (+ len 1))
         0)))
     (apply min))
user1804599
and is variadic.
But again, it's more for when people wait till after the vote was for X and then they say "Oh well we really should have done Y", if you really think that strongly, you should have voted in the first place douche bag
There are degrees of disagreement :P
@thecoshman If the polls make it clear I'm in a small minority, what's the point of going to cast a vote? Is it just to have a "ticket" to complain later? Why should my knowledge that casting a vote is a clear waste of time deprive me of the right to complain about a bad decision?
user1804599
> No matching method found: aget
ugh
nwp
nwp
15:08
@thecoshman "I care about the right decision being made. I don't care about which decision that is, how to get there or doing the homework required to figure it out. That's what politicians are for."
@thecoshman The way I see it, you never vote against the decision. By voting you're all making the same collective decision, even if the decision is different from the cross you made on the ballot. (Unless the system provides for protest votes; then you can actually vote against the decision, but I'm willingly ignoring that case here).
nwp
nwp
While that is not actually my opinion I can understand people who would agree with that.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz aget works on arrays, edges is an atom. Write @edges to dereference the atom.
@JerryCoffin Voting for an opinion that has low representation can make the difference between people acknowledge some like that compared to no one likes it all
@thecoshman You may vote against option A or option B, but you still make the same collective decision as anyone else.
15:09
@rightfold did that, didn't help
That's what elections are: collective decision-making.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz Is lookup-node an index?
user1804599
It sounds like a function.
It's fair to argue that your vote is not correctly reflected in the collective decision, but that's orthogonal.
15:10
@rightfold yes
@R.MartinhoFernandes well yes, part of voting is that when the decision is reached, you accept it, doesn't mean you have to like it
but if you don't like the decision that is made, I think you have more right to complain about that decision if you tried to vote for something else rather than chose to not vote at all
@rightfold maybe because I have a 2D array
If that is because you didn't feel informed enough, than I don't see why the results suddenly make you informed enough to say what you would have liked
In the end, even though I will staunchly defend the right hold the actual voters responsible for the decisions made, I don't think you can deprive them of their right to complain about it. IMO that's a core tenet of what we generally think of as democracy.
nwp
nwp
@thecoshman I can't tell if Trump or Hillary is worse. After Trump nuked Russia I feel informed enough to want to have gone with Hillary.
user1804599
15:13
@BartekBanachewicz The error was in a call to aget inside aset.
user1804599
XD
@rightfold lel
@rightfold I'm reading the edges badly btw
You're all collectively responsible, but not one is individually responsible.
@thecoshman In theory, I suppose it might. I've not seen it have much effect in practice. Here in the US, when George Bush (jr) barely won the electoral vote and lost the popular vote, he seemed to consider that permission to do everything he could to piss of everybody who hadn't supported him.
@nwp that is not really the same though. That is using information not available at the time of the vote, but you could have made a guess about it
15:15
@JerryCoffin And technically that's (part of) the power the election granted him.
user1804599
@BartekBanachewicz You have two reads
user1804599
Instead of one.
user1804599
I don't know what read does.
user1804599
Whateve.r
@R.MartinhoFernandes Indeed it is.
user1804599
15:16
oh reads a term from stdin
@rightfold yeah look at stdin
@thecoshman So you think you have less reason to complain if you didn't dare make a guess than someone who did exactly that, and to top it off guessed wrong?
@R.MartinhoFernandes I don't think they should be deprive the right to complain either... if you vote, and the vote doesn't go the way you want, then of course you can moan about how you don't like that the vote didn't go your way. But if you never voted, then how dare you complain you didn't get the result you wanted, if you wanted a given result you should have voted for it (that's the core idea of the "don't vote; don't complain")
@thecoshman But you said "I think you have more right to complain about that decision if"
@R.MartinhoFernandes can't think that one through... tired
15:18
@R.MartinhoFernandes guessing is gambling
@R.MartinhoFernandes more right to complain if you voted...
only gamble if you are prepared to lose
@rightfold seems to work now
user1804599
cool
well it should be 2 not 3
but I guess it's enough to subtract 1
15:18
@thecoshman if there's an actual difference, you are at least partially depriving one party. If there's no difference, what's "more"?
@R.MartinhoFernandes huh?
user1804599
that subtracts from 1
right
submitting
user1804599
(+ -1) is more readable.
Learn windows 10 for 20 bucks.... who is in? :P ironically it's been posted by the hackernews lol
http://thehackernews.tradepub.com/free-offer/windows-10-tutorials--120-of-the-most-popular-functions-a-19.95-value-free-for-a-limited-time
15:20
test 0	accepted	OK	0.69s	335552KB
test 1	wrong answer	OK	0.7s	335552KB
well
user1804599
XD
I like the changes you made though, they make the code much much better
@thecoshman If someone has more right, someone else presumably has less, no?
@thecoshman Basically, I don't think guessing absolves you of responsibility, especially if you have the choice to not guess.
going 0 -> 1
going 1 -> 2
2
well this looks ok :F
user1804599
Write it in Haskell first, then translate 1:1 to Clojure.
user1804599
15:24
Much easier.
user1804599
user1804599
Now I can finally tell donuts and coffee mugs apart!
Ven
Ven
@BartekBanachewicz are you koaning?
you can now order merchandise with your pizza XD
15:27
user1804599
ugh a spork
things are cheap especially the apron
I'd get one were I a cooking person
user1804599
StackedCooked
@AlexM. I'll answer your Gift Shop with a Gif Shop.
(Sorry, couldn't resist).
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes, if you don't vote, you have less rights to complain that you didn't get what you wanted.
nwp
nwp
15:33
The problem with the voting is that you cannot vote for what you want, you have to pick between the shitty options you get. I totally get that people don't vote because either choice is shitty and that they complain about the choice without voting.
It's like if someone says "What do you went for dinner", if you say "I don't care" or refuse to answer, you can't really turn around and moan when they give you something you don't like, but if you say "chips" and they give you cabbage, well this is cearly not what you wanted
It's not the same at all.
Where's the collective compromise aspect in your analogy?
If you're going for a group dinner and it turns out the restaurant had dogs licking the plates for dishwashers, I think it's totally fair to say that it sucks, whether you chose it or not.
ok, so a group of nine people, they are asked if they want indian of chinese. If two people refuse to speak up, they really shouldn't then moan that "I wanted idian but I'm getting chinese"
@thecoshman Basically this is an ad hominem argument. It shifts the merit of an argument on to the merit of the person posing it.
user1804599
Ad hominem? Don't make me laugh. What do you know about arguing, really
15:37
Because the exact same complaint magically becomes valid if mouthed by someone who made a cross on a piece of paper some years back.
@R.MartinhoFernandes ah, but the was it clear at the time of decision making that there was the chance you were going to a place that had dogs licking dirty plates
user1804599
A group has three options for dinner, "Indian", "Chinese", "literally eating shit". If you don't vote for something, you can't really complain that "literally eating shit" was chosen. You can question the sort of company you keep, but the decision was made fairly
> The collective noun for a group of hedgehogs is array.
welcoming new members must be really annoying for everyone else
nwp
nwp
@thecoshman Unless you question who gets to decide that "Indian", "Chinese", "literally eating shit" are the only options and complain that you didn't get Italian.
15:43
@nwp well I guess that's a valid point. But I think how you determine what options you have is another problem
user1804599
@thecoshman Compulsory voting. If you don't vote, you get punished (e.g. no food at all).
user1804599
Or a punch in the belly.
@thecoshman Yeah, but when was the last time you had to vote between Conservative, Labor, and Adolf Hitler as in 1944?
@StackedCrooked is boost 1.62 planned on Coliru?
user1804599
lol this exists cv-pls.com
15:46
@R.MartinhoFernandes ha ha ha, well you brought in the absurd results :P
@thecoshman (I think the Godwin here is relevant, but you can replace "Adolf Hitler" with whatever non-Godwin politician you want as stand-in for "literally eating shit")
@rightfold Bad naming. Needs to be MEMES/POTUS/2016/Election/Victory/Hillary and MEMES/POTUS/2016/Election/Victory/Donald
@thecoshman So my take-away from this discussion is that "literally eating shit" is not an absurd dinner option.
(take-away, get it?)
but this all about the phrase "don't vote; don't complain", if you have a given list of options, if you didn't vote for one of them, you either "are happy with what ever is chosen", "unhappy with what ever is chosen". I can't see any middle ground. If you have any preference, but chose to vote, you don't have a leg to stand on
@R.MartinhoFernandes I bet it's a dish somewhere :|
@R.MartinhoFernandes Cute. Now if only I could get them to take away the shit from the current US election. Unfortunately, it doesn't seem like it would help much even if they did, since there would be nobody left.
15:49
@thecoshman IMO the only leg you need to stand on is "that was a bad decision".
Voting is irrelevant.
Ell
Ell
Okay my Debian system is not booting :(
I must be unlucky. Debian has been terrible for me
Almost tempted to ask what it does
nwp
nwp
@Ell did you mess with grub or did it break by itself?
user1804599
@sehe ?]

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