Quote:
Originally Posted by qasdfdsaq
Well, I'm sure incompetence plays a part but the most recent delay was due to some case being taken all the way up to the supreme court to demand the right to object to the government's plans...
To some extent I'd prefer the system in use in Switzerland, where public policy decisions are made directly by the voting public, not the politicians. Public interest seizures and/or works should of course provide adequate compensation for those who lose property but having major projects get held up for years going around the houses in the court system over a technicality is ludicrous.
I'm still impressed how China have gone from virtually no high speed rail at all to the biggest high speed rail network in the world over the course of barely a decade. Partly helped by the government's tendency to make people disappear when they object.
|
Yes, you have to admire a Communist dictatorship's ability to (literally) bulldoze people out of the way ...
I'm not sure your complaints about the hold-up in Aberdeen are compatible with your admiration for Swiss-style direct democracy. The Swiss are legendary for getting nothing done at all, thanks to the number of referendums that result in a proposal being struck down.