

Other EU countries have a similar unfair system. They’re quite easy to spot because they usually have 2 parties that get 90%+ of the seats.
Once that system is in place, the incentives of the party in power are to keep it, because they’d lose a supermajority if they win the next election cycle.
I honestly don’t know how you could fix the system once it’s so entrenched. I think it can only change if people become aware of how their shitty political situation (only 2 viable parties) is entirely created by this electoral system, and somehow demand a change.









The title is quite an understatement. “Introduction” should be replaced with “everything you might possibly come across in your IT career”. I remember it being a very good book, but very theory-focused and hard. Even if you just read it through for the explanations and exercises and skip over the heavy theorems and proofs, you’ll know more than most professional IT workers in the field. If you are considering to buy it maybe borrow it from a library first, because it might be too difficult to go through alone if you are not used to the academic writing style.