Many of us vote for candidates based only on personality and whether they make us feel good about ourselves or are people we would like to invite into our homes. Instead, what we need are techno-nerds and policy wonks.
We owe our well-crafted democratic form of government with its
cleverly designed system of checks and balances, to a weird
bunch of policy, technology, and scientific wonks and nerds such as
Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, and Alexander
Hamilton.
These guys and their compatriots were the kind of wonks and nerds,
who, when presented with a problem and a complex system to analyze and
possibly replicate, threw themselves into learning as much about it as
possible. Some were best at policy, and others were best at technology,
and some, like Jefferson and Franklin were outstanding contributors to
both.
They were also able to put aside, for a while, their passionate adherence to particular ideologies. And because they were not "true believers," they were able to come up with commonly agreed-upon compromises, the essence of effective representative democracy.
We now desperately need a new generation of such wonks and nerds to
repair our delicately balanced system of government which has been
crippled through our mis-directed passions and either/or advocacies.
And while these wonks and nerds are at it, maybe they can come up with a set of self-regulating checks and balances to protect our financial system from our own worst instincts, modeled on what our "founding nerds and wonks" built into our U.S. Constitution.
The wonks and nerds we need to run for political office and take direct control are out there. Some I see working within government advising the politicials, such as engineering nerd and ecomomics wonk Neel Kashkari, the interim assistant secretary in the U.S. Treasury assigned with the responsibilty for managing the financial bailout. Others I meet at the embedded system design, science, and technology meetings I attend and write about.