Sounds like something the Koch brothers might favor.
A quick search shows that they've donated $100 million to further various causes. This would have the same voting power as 2.5% of Cleveland, if each citizen there paid only $1, and if the brothers spent all their money on a single election. That seems like pretty limited reach. Much more powerful would be organizations that could convince a large number of people to donate relatively small sums. Unions, organized crime, existing politicians, etc. If you could get 50,000 people to increase their vote from $1 to $1.50 you'd have more influence than the Kochs. But this effect is sufficiently powerful that I imagine the whole game would be getting large numbers of people to lend their support, just as it is now. So I don't expect this would make a great difference. Charles Greathouse Analyst/Programmer Case Western Reserve University On Mon, May 4, 2015 at 2:00 PM, meekerdb <meekerdb@verizon.net> wrote:
I wonder if any of the math-fun list are aware of quadratic voting?
http://ericposner.com/quadratic-voting/
Sounds like something the Koch brothers might favor.
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