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#41
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![]() "Dave LaCourse" wrote in message ... Tom, could you explaine that, please? What corruption? Dave lessee.....vote suppression, bogus counting process, a few other things. And, for the record, such corruption of popular vote goes on in countless ways, nationwide, all the time. In 2000, in Florida, it just allowed the elected officials of Florida(GOP) to 'declare' victory of a candidate under dubious circumstances, with the Supreme Court maintaining the state's right to do so. Tom |
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On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 09:41:09 GMT, "Tom Littleton"
wrote: lessee.....vote suppression, bogus counting process, a few other things. And, for the record, such corruption of popular vote goes on in countless ways, nationwide, all the time. Probably does. It was said that JFK (whom I voted for) won Chicago and therefore Ill. because of voter fraud. In 2000, in Florida, it just allowed the elected officials of Florida(GOP) to 'declare' victory of a candidate under dubious circumstances, with the Supreme Court maintaining the state's right to do so. Have you read the supreme's decision. It simply affirmed that the State of Florida could not change the voting laws post facto. There were, what, 5 recounts with Gore losing all of them. The law stated that the results had to be in by Jan 1. The Florida Supremes tried to change that law with their own Chief Justice recusing himself because he knew they couldn't do what they tried to do. Apparently he was the only honest justice on the Florida supremes. BTW, ALL the supremes in Florida were appointed by Democrats. They did recounts and recounts and recounts, with Gore losing every one. The Dems wanted to only recount one district - heavily Democrat. Was that the correct thing to do? Yeah, if you wanted Gore to win. So, are you saying that they should have kept up the recounts well past the day the president was to take office, or until Gore won a recount? I will guarantee that if Gore won just ONE of the recounts the Florida Dems would have declared him the winner. Just ONE. Bush won ALL the recounts. Dimple chads, pregnant chads, hanging chads ad nauseum..... Gore LOST. Get over it. Dave |
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On Thu, 31 Jul 2008 22:46:11 -0600, rw
wrote: riverman wrote: I'm opposed to one-man-one-vote also, but not because all men are not equally infomed, but because I am a rural denizen, and would find it dispicable that the more populated urban centers would *always* rule the vote. I'm a rural denizen, as well. About as rural as you can get -- Custer County, Idaho. I'm also a liberal or progressive or whatever term you prefer. So is the majority of my community of Stanley, population 100 as of the last census. In 2004 Stanley went for Kerry three to two. Idaho is a solidly Republican state, of course. My second congressional district is even redder than district one. (Idaho only has two congressional districts.) Simply put, that means, under our current electoral system, that my vote and the votes of like-minded voters in Stanley, count for nothing. See - the Founding Fathers DID know what they were doing... Seriously, though, I suspect you know that your idea is unworkable in any group as large as the eligible voter pool of the US and IAC, doing so would require a complete restructuring of the _United_ _States_. Furthermore, there is no actual "popular vote," nor one intended, but rather, an informal adding-up of the votes cast totals of 51 distinct elections - no one "wins" or "loses" it because it doesn't exist. The election is for the President of the _United_ _States_, not the President of Each and Every Citizen Officially Residing in Any of the States or Other Locales and Eligible to Vote, regardless of the bull**** the candidates spout about wanting to the president of all citizens. Also, no law or other such restriction prevents you from moving to a location in which you feel your vote would count (or count more). Under a simple popular-vote system they would count. In a true democracy, there would be no party primaries as now (each party could make an unofficial recommendation, endorsement, etc.). Each voter would get, basically, a piece of paper with the name of the office and a blank line as a ballot upon which voters would indicate their choice for each office, but I'm sure the ACLU and similar would say that was unfair to some group or another. As it stands, even if the POTUS election itself were "a simple popular-vote system," if a voter wants their vote "to count," they must choose between McCain or Obama because no other candidate can actually win, and those two were chosen by systems that in no way resemble a "simple popular-vote system." IOW, a "simple popular-vote system" in the election wouldn't really be much more "democratic" than the EC system. You don't like democracy because the urban majority does things you don't like. I dislike anti-democracy because the rural majority does things I don't like. It cuts both ways. I say let's have democracy, and let the chips fall where they may. Are you volunteering to be the lamb among the two wolves...? Or Ken can be dictator. :-) Not likely - more proof the FFs knew what they were doing... TC, R |
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#45
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On Aug 1, 10:20*am, wrote:
On Thu, 31 Jul 2008 22:46:11 -0600, rw wrote: riverman wrote: I'm opposed to one-man-one-vote also, but not because all men are not equally infomed, but because I am a rural denizen, and would find it dispicable that the more populated urban centers would *always* rule the vote. I'm a rural denizen, as well. About as rural as you can get -- Custer County, Idaho. I'm also a liberal or progressive or whatever term you prefer. So is the majority of my community of Stanley, population 100 as of the last census. In 2004 Stanley went for Kerry three to two. Idaho is a solidly Republican state, of course. My second congressional district is even redder than district one. (Idaho only has two congressional districts.) Simply put, that means, under our current electoral system, that my vote and the votes of like-minded voters in Stanley, count for nothing. See - the Founding Fathers DID know what they were doing... Seriously, though, I suspect you know that your idea is unworkable in any group as large as the eligible voter pool of the US and IAC, doing so would require a complete restructuring of the _United_ _States_. Furthermore, there is no actual "popular vote," nor one intended, but rather, an informal adding-up of the votes cast totals of 51 distinct elections - no one "wins" or "loses" it because it doesn't exist. *The election is for the President of the _United_ _States_, not the President of Each and Every Citizen Officially Residing in Any of the States or Other Locales and Eligible to Vote, regardless of the bull**** the candidates spout about wanting to the president of all citizens. Also, no law or other such restriction prevents you from moving to a location in which you feel your vote would count (or count more). You're missing the point. RW lives somewhere that his vote counts more. I'm sure an Idaho voter counts 2x a California voter...or some other such nonsense. But Idaho doesn't vote the way RW thinks it should, so it's unfair to him. :-) Note that he's complaining about Alaska being unfair, but that's only because it doesn't vote the way RW thinks it should. It's the whiner's problem. "X" is the worst system in the world because I personally don't benefit under it. "X" may be better than "Y" in general, but "Y" benefits me more so "X" is obviously wrong. It's a compromise between the large and the small states. It was designed that way and it's still working that way. ...and yes, Gore lost, get over it already. - Ken |
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On Fri, 01 Aug 2008 12:45:55 -0600, rw
wrote: wrote: Simply put, that means, under our current electoral system, that my vote and the votes of like-minded voters in Stanley, count for nothing. See - the Founding Fathers DID know what they were doing... Seriously, though, I suspect you know that your idea is unworkable in any group as large as the eligible voter pool of the US and IAC, doing so would require a complete restructuring of the _United_ _States_. WTF are you taking about? In every presidential election in my memory the press has reported the popular vote. Ah...OK, so Steve Barnard can be listed as favoring Fox News to certify the vote... It's simply the sum of all the popular votes in all the states. There is no "popular vote" in all of the states, either. What's so hard about that? A phrase with which you are doubtlessly familiar, but it is considerably more difficult than you appear to realize. There is simply no legal method for a national Presidential election, which is not to say there could not be one. But doing so would not be simply adding up the vote totals from each state. Furthermore, there is no actual "popular vote," nor one intended, but rather, an informal adding-up of the votes cast totals of 51 distinct elections - no one "wins" or "loses" it because it doesn't exist. So when the press reports a popular vote they're just puling it out of their ass? Baloney. In a sense, yes, they are. While it is generally fairly accurate, it is not exact, and often, because it makes no difference, the national media doesn't cover the _exact_ certified totals - IOW, if the media reports California voters as having cast 15,323,462 votes for Candidate A and 12,562,021 for Candidate B and declares A the winner, but A actually got 500,000 less and B 500,000 more, it's not national news because it changed nothing - A is the winner - under the current scheme. The election is for the President of the _United_ _States_, not the President of Each and Every Citizen Officially Residing in Any of the States or Other Locales and Eligible to Vote, regardless of the bull**** the candidates spout about wanting to the president of all citizens. Also, no law or other such restriction prevents you from moving to a location in which you feel your vote would count (or count more). Under a simple popular-vote system they would count. In a true democracy, there would be no party primaries as now (each party could make an unofficial recommendation, endorsement, etc.). Each voter would get, basically, a piece of paper with the name of the office and a blank line as a ballot upon which voters would indicate their choice for each office, but I'm sure the ACLU and similar would say that was unfair to some group or another. As it stands, even if the POTUS election itself were "a simple popular-vote system," if a voter wants their vote "to count," they must choose between McCain or Obama because no other candidate can actually win, and those two were chosen by systems that in no way resemble a "simple popular-vote system." IOW, a "simple popular-vote system" in the election wouldn't really be much more "democratic" than the EC system. More bull****. In the next election a voter can vote for Obama, McCain, Nader, or Barr, and maybe a few others -- anyone who met the qualifications to get on the ballot. Er, no. There is no "ballot," there are 51 distinct ballot_S_, as well as...well, here's a hint: how does one promote their campaign to be a write-in candidate in, oh, say, South Carolina? (Is Lyndon LaRouche running this time?) The way the parties run their primaries is their business, Primaries? I thought you wanted a democracy... although I'd hope that they'd run them according to democratic principles. Well, **** into one hand and hope into the other and see which fills up faster... HTH, R |
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#48
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![]() "Dave LaCourse" wrote in message ... Probably does. It was said that JFK (whom I voted for) won Chicago and therefore Ill. because of voter fraud. that's pretty must established fact, not hearsay. If you want to generalize, the Dems get out the vote from the deceased better, the GOP has fraudulant absentee balloting down to a science. It simply affirmed that the State of Florida could not change the voting laws post facto. There were, what, 5 recounts with Gore losing all of them. ..... Gore LOST. Get over it. not my point, David. Something was clearly up with turnout and votes for Buchanan in a lot of districts. No investigation was done by the GOP-led state government. It was a very fraudulant, crooked election from a notoriously fraudulant, crooked state. And, it affected the national election, in that case. You will note, however, that I defended the electoral college system, as I feel it's purpose of evening out the importance of densely populated and rural areas serves the country well. As for getting over Gore losing, hell, I wasn't surprised that he lost in the first place, so nothing to get over here...... Tom |
#49
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![]() wrote in message ... On Jul 30, 1:58 pm, rw wrote: You've touched on another problem with our electoral system. The state-by-state winner-take-all system concentrates campaign effort and money into a few "swing" states, while the candidates all but ignore the voters in solidly red or blue states. This isn't good. It holds our politics hostage to small, highly motivated constituencies in the swing states. So we should go back to locally elected electoral college members who will considerately cast their vote for president? ;-) Jon. They were not locally elected. The Federal founding Fathers left it up to the states on how they picked the voters in the Electoral College. And the reason Alaska gets the minimum is they have 2 Senators and only one Representative. EC set up for just this reason. Did not allow the big states to run roughshod over the small states. |
#50
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![]() "riverman" wrote in message ... On Jul 31, 12:55 pm, Ken Fortenberry wrote: rw wrote: Ken Fortenberry wrote: Apparently you want to use those numbers to claim that Alaskans have three times more clout in the electoral college than Californians. Sorry, but that dog won't hunt. Alaskans have over ten times *less* clout in the electoral college than Californians and over ten times less clout than Texans with their 34 electoral college votes. I'm saying, and consistently have been saying, that an Alaskan has three times the voting power of a Californian and a Texan, not that Alaska AS AN ENTIRE STATE, has three times the voting power. Can't you ****ing read? You're making a spurious argument. You want to claim that because 1 electoral vote is split between 600,000 Californians but only between 200,000 Alaskans that an individual Alaskan has three times more "voting power". It's like arguing that because 3 people split an orange somebody else has more apples. -- Ken Fortenberry Besides, several states have Alaska beat for a few number of voters per electoral vote. Alaska has 218,478 per EV North Dakota has 211,455 per EV Vermont has 207,131 per EV DC has 184,507 per EV and Wyoming has 168,843 per EV In fact, a single Wyoming EV represents almost four Texas EVs. I'd think, with the propensity of Texans at high levels of our government in recent years that the EV system would have been changed if they felt the system was biased against them. --riverman And California being a winner take all state, disenfranchises about 75% of the people by geography. SF and LA are a majority of the people and the rest of the state is fairly conservative. The Conservative sections never get a resonable say. In neither state or national elections. The Gerrymandering of the state gives us a legislature that is much more liberal than the state is as a whole. The district covering Sunnyvale and the Silicon Valley also goes over highway 152 in a 2 mile wide section for 100 miles to gather in Livingston in the Central Valley. And the very liberal leadership of the Legislature promised us a fair redistricting before we had elections to force just that. They lied, and after the election where the measure failed because of the promise. They have ignored their promise. All public officials should serve two terms. One in office and one in prison. |
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