In other words, we're back to direct democracy, yes? The citizenry makes laws, not the elected representatives.
Maybe eventually, if DD was able to prove itself a responsible and effective way to govern. But before we start with a requiem for Socrates, let me explain.
The practical model I'm focused on right now is along the lines of
Senator On-Line, where the public decides how it wants the Senator to vote on every bill. So far this involves keeping all the existing legislative structures and safeguards, but replacing the decision-making process. Now the Senator could absolutely disregard the peoples will. If it was a bad call, it would obviously impact chances of re-election, or maybe you impose a one-term limit. But in terms of implementation, all of the technology to do this is already proven - we could do it now if we had the will. However, in the last
real election the SOL candidate got 0.06% of the popular vote, so there is some distance left to go before we'll get the chance to try it out.
The theoretical model I'm also looking at goes beyond this - here I'm more interested in whether we could expand our social networks into networks of trust and expertise, able to divide monolithic legislation into smaller/targeted/relevant chunks, and in the process come up with more effective decisions more efficiently without the undue effects of political partisanship. If proxy voting was implemented, then it would avoid the problem of the uninformed traipsing over issues they know little about.. although contentious issues could potentially devolve into DD, with everyone overriding their proxy-vote. I've discussed various motivations in play which would reduce this risk, but it even with such a system in place, there is no test which would absolutely prove that we wouldn't choose to abuse it. So the question I ask is how effective would those motivations be? I do not think it is desirable to have a system which is 100% foolproof.
Any system which cannot be abused also imprisons you.The most realistic strategy I see for this is to implement it as a separate and parallel/shadow initiative. Run it over a period of time with as large a group as possible. If it proves its worth, it may become noteworthy/politically relevant and increasing its userbase. If it becomes noteworthy, it may become part of political decision making. That's a chain of maybes, but I think it's the path of least resistance.