These discussions are always interesting, because all of us agree that voting is really important. But that starting point leads us to really different conclusions. I see voting as being important because it's a mechanism by which one person tries to get his way through coersion. As a result, we need to have high standards for who can participate in the process, balancing against other considerations obviously. You and Matthias see voting as being important more as a means, I think, of civic participation and governing legitimacy, so you want voting rights spread as broadly as possible. I understand where you guys are coming from.
Well put although I'd also say I think of voting as the mechanism whereby the individual completes the circuit of providing feedback to the society which is coercing him. If something goes to a-kilter, you can vote the bums out as it were. And that's why I think depriving ex-felons of their vote is particularly mean-spirited. These are people for whom the state is particularly coercive in their lives. The state may mandate that they appear at certain times, take certain drug tests, not live in certain areas, and be at particular risk of a high penalty for a relatively minor infraction, among other things. So if you remove them from the feedback loop then you have a pretty one-way ratchet of "getting tough on crime." In the tax threads, I hear a lot of, "everyone needs to pay so that they have skin in the game" but there's other instances, like this, whereby people are voting for consequences (stiff sentences, making things more crime) where they have no skin and we're depriving the vote from the only people who do.