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Good idea Eric. I'll vote for it!Maybe you could make this into a poll?
I agree 100%. The university of California has lectures designed for the basic scientific principals part available for free on youtube, I believe you'll find them if you search for "UC Berkeley Physics for future presidents" or something. Good lectures I reckon.
I was just listening to a Science podcast and the person being interviewed wanted to encourage people who are trained in science to run for Congressional office. This seems a bit unrealistic to me. People who want to study science in school typically want to work in some kind of scientific field, not run for office, so any scientist who gets elected will be one or two at most in his or her house (whether Senate, Congress, Commons or Lords). Perhaps a better idea would be to require anyone interested in running for public office (in which they will be responsible for shaping their national or state policy) to take (and pass) a college level introductory science class. The class should teach critical thinking, basic scientific principles, and perhaps a bit of history.
I think we have a fundamental problem with our systems. Political positions offer plentiful power, status, money and pensions. What kind of people does that attract? I suggest that we start correcting that by changing their pensions to the same as we get in the private sector.If a polititian commits a felony they should be fired.We have the capability to replace most of our "representatives" with machines (much cheaper). Since government offiials are now voting with a PIN, why don't we eliminate them and vote with a PIN ourselves?