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You can write to your MP even if you didn't or couldn't vote.
Your MP does not have to treat your issue with equal merit to everyone else's - if your issue is contradictory to manifesto pledges or in direct contradiction to the MP or other voters positions on an issue.
If your MP and or the party they represent had a manifesto pledge to ban wellington boots what happens when you write a letter raising the issue of wanting to buy or sell wellington boots ?
Does the MP suddenly change their mind and start campaigning to support you ?
What if you want dogs banned from the local woodland trail and write to your MP to raise the issue yet an equal or greater amount of other people write to the MP to oppose the ban ?
Not being able to vote doesn't change in any way your ability to write to your local MP regardless.
Here are the differences:
A minority view is not the same as a minority right.
A member of a minority does not get to dictate to other people how they should live their lives, but equally the majority doesn't either where it is in conflict with treating people equally.
Equality before the law means that the laws should apply and be applied equally to everyone regardless of their status.
I don't support 'minority views' or stand up for them, nor necessarily stand against them.
To me views should be supported on their merit, not the number of people holding them.
However, I do support the right to not be treated unfairly or differently simply because someone is a minority - and I support the principles having a framework to keep that protection sacrosanct from the majority.
I would like a system in which voters can only vote if they actually understand the basics of what they are voting for.
However, I do not WANT the system to change to only allow votes from those competent enough to vote.
It is a utopian ideal - either everyone can vote because they all learn and understand the basics, or a completely fair, unbiased and free from human error system restricts those that don't on a perfect test.
If that is not possible (which we all know isn't) then we don't implement it.
However, what that has to do with the wanting to take the life of someone who no longer poses a threat because they are detained, I do not know - maybe we should leave this tangent and get back to the actual topic of discussion |
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