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posted by n1 on Monday July 13 2015, @07:18AM   Printer-friendly
from the voters-to-be-prosecuted-for-conspiracy-to-corrupt dept.

Steven I. Weiss writes in The Atlantic how game theory can shed light both on what is happening in Washington and on how the bargaining power of its negotiating parties may evolve over time and comes to the conclusion that hypocrisy is essential to the functioning of Congress - in fact it's the only tool legislators have after they've rooted out real corruption. "Legislators do not pay each other for votes, and every member of a parliament in a democratic society is legally equal to every member," writes Congressman Barney Frank in his new memoir, Frank: A Life in Politics From the Great Society to Same-Sex Marriage. For legislators, cooperation is a form of political currency. They act in concert with other legislators, even at the expense of their own beliefs, in order to bank capital or settle accounts: "Because parliamentary bodies have to arrive at binding decisions on the full range of human activity in an atmosphere lacking the structure provided by either money or hierarchy, members have to find ways to bring some order out of what could be chaos," writes Frank. So trading votes, also known as logrolling, is how the business of politics is conducted. "Once you have promised another member that you will do something—vote a certain way, sponsor a particular bill, or conduct a hearing—you are committed to do it." According to Frank legislators have to act in ideologically inconsistent ways in the short run if they want to advance their larger objectives in the long run, as those larger objectives can only be achieved with teamwork. And the other members of their legislative team are only going to play ball with them if they know that they'll take one for the team, that they'll vote for something they don't like because the team needs it.

Game theory sets out conditions under which negotiating parties end up cooperating, and why they sometimes fail to do so. It does so based on analyzing what drives individuals in the majority of bargaining situations: incentives, access to information, initial power conditions, the extent of mutual trust, and accountability enforcement. Instead of seeing political flip-flopping as a necessary evil, Frank suggests it is inherent to democracy and according to Frank if there's any blame to be doled out in connection with political hypocrisy, it's to be placed on the heads of voters who criticize legislators for it, instead of accepting it as a necessary part of democratic politics. "Legislators who accommodate voter sentiment are denounced as cowardly, and those who defy it are just as fiercely accused of rejecting democratic norms," writes Frank. "I will run for office and I will tell you what I think, and then I will go ahead and do what I think right, and if you don't like what I'm doing, then you can kick me out."

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 13 2015, @05:17PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 13 2015, @05:17PM (#208565)

    "Laws, like sausages, cease to inspire respect in proportion as we know how they are made."
    ---
    John Godfrey Saxe, The Daily Cleveland Herald, Mar. 29, 1869

    This is worth a rebuttal -- here is my one data point:

    A few years ago I went on a tour of a small sausage plant. Our small group had lunch before and several ordered sausages--commenting that this might be the last time to enjoy one (before seeing how they were made).

    The plant was spotless. Among other things, they only accept meat into the plant that has already been separated from bone, the bones are often the source of bacterial infection. From talking to the workers (who all seemed friendly and open), it certainly looked like management was doing the right things for quality of product. While the work environment is moderately hostile--most of the employees have to work in rooms chilled to just above freezing--there was regular break time to get warmed back up.

    After the 2 hour tour, we all agreed that we would have no problem eating anything that was packaged in that sausage and meat processing factory.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 14 2015, @10:39AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 14 2015, @10:39AM (#208811)

    I'm sure that is also the case with your average plant and that the prices of this factory are surely reasonable...