jamesinclair
Banned
Its a good thing Harry Reid is holding fast on preserving tradition!
Of course a Californian favors abolition of the Senate, in favor of the popular vote for Presidency etc. etc.
It's the flipside of the Republicans wanting to elect the President through gerrymandered districts.
Impressions of the Senate hearing with Hillary?
Actually I looked it up and if you won a majority in every major city and suburb you'd win easily. Something like 70% of the nation lives in cities/suburbs. I'm not arguing against a popular vote though. But if we're going to do it then Florida needs to get it's shit together. We can't have them taking 3 weeks to count all their votes when everyone else is done after a day or two.
So why won't you answer my straightforward questions about WHAT YOU THINK DEMOCRACY IS, so that this conversation can be even marginally productive?
It's the flipside of the Republicans wanting to elect the President through gerrymandered districts.
But what TRANSCENDS the mere opinion of what so-and-so-thinks about which system is "more" democratic than another, is how it advantages or disadvantages a party or not -- compared with what we currently do.
Impressions of the Senate hearing with Hillary?
Hillary won, coming away without making news in basically an 8 hour day of grilling. Looked professional, putting herself on a higher level than those doing the grilling, and had confidence coming out the ying yang.
Because you have to consider the system you're proposing in context to what we've been doing ALREADY, not just literally on the merits of the idea itself.
The two are not equivalent. Your only argument is that they are both changes to the status quo partially motivated by partisan political gain. Why should I care about the motives? One side wants the will of the people represented more accurately the other side doesn't.
Since everyone has such huge different versions of democracy, there's nothing more democratic about doing it via the popular vote vs. on a statewide basis vs. on a district basis except because so-and-so-said-But what TRANSCENDS the mere opinion of what so-and-so-thinks about which system is "more" democratic than another
They make an argument against the city visits without really offering their alternative prediction.
The bolded part is essentially correct, yes.
Do Maine and Nebraska not represent their peoples' voices more accurately because they split their EVs?
Since everyone has such huge different versions of democracy, there's nothing more democratic about doing it via the popular vote vs. on a statewide basis vs. on a district basis except because so-and-so-said-so.
But what TRANSCENDS the mere opinion of what so-and-so-thinks about which system is "more" democratic than another, is how it advantages or disadvantages a party or not -- compared with what we currently do.
Why, that's a great idea! In fact, let's get rid of the whole Senate, make it so the House can't be gerrymandered, triple the size of the House and index it to population, and move from FPTP to a preference-voting system.
You are literally arguing that we should not fix a flaw in the system because at current one party would benefit from the flaw being fixed. But the whole point is that the reason its a flaw is because the party in question deserves to benefit and isn'tYou keep missing the point because you keep debating about the merits of the idea instead of debating about the merits of the idea COMPARED WITH WHAT WE'RE ALREADY DOING.
The Republican Party needs to moderate itself. But they need to moderate themselves with the current system *too*.
Okay, is your argument that the popular vote isn't the best metric for determining who should be elected?"One side wants the will of the people represented more accurately the other side doesn't"
BUT THAT'S THE THING! SAYS WHO?
Do Maine and Nebraska not represent their peoples' voices more accurately because they split their EVs?
The bolded part is essentially correct, yes.
"One side wants the will of the people represented more accurately the other side doesn't"
BUT THAT'S THE THING! SAYS WHO?
Do Maine and Nebraska not represent their peoples' voices more accurately because they split their EVs?
That's what I keep saying: If you take a step back, you can define "represent more accurately" a BAJILLION different ways. Everyone has their own opinion.
What the VA Republicans are doing is outrageous not because it is undemocratic on its face. It feels undemocratic because it systematically gives an advantage to the other party just by sheer system-changing; even when everything else stayed the same.
So you're saying the idea can't be judged on it's own merits, because that would be unfair to Republicans?
Also, I think I see where we're coming to a disagreement. You are arguing from the stance that the current Electoral system is the pinnacle of "fairness,"
My definition of a "fair" election is one which best represents the will of the majority of voters (in which case, a popular vote is the most fair). You seem to have a different view of what a fair election process is (from what I gather, you think it should somehow give each candidate a roughly equal chance of winning, regardless of the will of the people).
Furthermore, you are entirely wrong that a popular vote somehow systematically favors Dems. Republicans have won the popular vote tons of times throughout history. A popular vote would only favor Dems currently because currently more Americans align with the Democratic party. In the past that wasn't so, and in the future it may not be so. There's no systematic bias there.
I thought this was the thread where we talk about a blog post we made/are thinking about making?Sure, it might require some discussion of principles, but, hey, it's a DISCUSSION THREAD.
What is more accurate than people voting for their most preferred candidate with no bullshit in between?That's what I keep saying: If you take a step back, you can define "represent more accurately" a BAJILLION different ways. Everyone has their own opinion.
But I mean, don't we discount the idea of the fairness of deciding a president via gerrymandered district because it's unfair to Democrats?
You all take for granted that national popular vote INHERENTLY means "best represents the will of the majority of voters", and that is so surface-y and un-thought-out, and the fact is there are a ton of different ways to think about that.
That's why I'm saying that we can narrow down the ways to think about it by comparing it to how it advantages one party or not.
But I mean, don't we discount the idea of the fairness of deciding a president via gerrymandered district because it's unfair to Democrats?
What is more accurate than people voting for their most preferred candidate with no bullshit in between?
maybe there is an advanced race of mind readers who would be able to totally and completely understand a candidate down to their most base levels and if they got to have their votes counted double it'd be more accurate?
So pigeon, do you think Nebraska's 2008 electoral college vote didn't more accurately represent the will of its people than it would have if it was winner-take-all?
Hil-dawg is the one in white.
But I mean, don't we discount the idea of the fairness of deciding a president via gerrymandered district because it's unfair to Democrats?
That's the whole reason this is worth talking about as something grounded in present day reality instead of just having a nice old debate about systems of democracy.
In the future, computers will be able to read our minds, figure out our preferences, then extrapolate from there and figure out what our preferences would be if we were smarter and awesomer.
Then we will count all those votes up and only then will we have true democracy.
No we absolutely don't. It's about the fairness to the voters, not the political parties.
So...
it's more fair for Utah to cast all of its electoral votes to Romney, despite Salt Lake City, just like the Omaha area being able to cast its vote for Obama was also unfair?
Or was the Nebraska 2008 an example of a result MORE ACCURATELY reflecting the will of the people?
I have mixed feelings as well. Hopefully what this really means is that soldier roles will be determined by individual skill rather than simply looking at gender, which wouldn't skew effectiveness. This also might lead to fewer females enlisting.I'm kind of conflicted about letting women in combat on the front lines. If they can perform to the same standards as men all the more power to them, but I'd bet a good portion of them can't. Especially for special forces units, I don't see them being able to keep up for the most part so effectively those units should remain closed.
I don't think you've actually comprehended a single word anyone has said
I absolutely have.
This is what it is:
"The only fair way to do democracy is the national popular vote because we've decided that the most direct form of democracy is the fairest."
Your argument has become incoherent. Are you now trying to tell us that popular vote is more fair?
I keep trying to say this and no one wants to admit it:
There are different ways to define what "fair" is, what "democracy" is, and what it means to "have a fair say", and that doesn't equal a national popular vote like you're all acting as if it's some obvious fact that everyone else is just too blind to see.
I absolutely have.
This is what it is:
"The only fair way to do democracy is the national popular vote because we've decided that the most direct form of democracy is the fairest."
I keep trying to say this and no one wants to admit it:
There are different ways to define what "fair" is, what "democracy" is, and what it means to "have a fair say", and that doesn't equal a national popular vote like you're all acting as if it's some obvious fact that everyone else is just too blind to see.
You can argue that a national popular vote makes their voices heard just as much as you can argue that it makes their voices heard LESS.
I keep trying to say this and no one wants to admit it:
There are different ways to define what "fair" is, what "democracy" is, and what it means to "have a fair say", and that doesn't equal a national popular vote like you're all acting as if it's some obvious fact that everyone else is just too blind to see.
You can argue that a national popular vote makes their voices heard just as much as you can argue that it makes their voices heard LESS. By expanding the boarders through which we consider votes cast, you certainly can marginalize people just as much as you might be including them.
If you're a hardcore Obama hater in Utah, even if Obama lost the election, would you want the right to say "Utah does not endorse Barack Obama for president"?
Why does ANYONE vote for president in deep red or deep blue states? It's to have a say; to have their voices heard.
You can argue that a national popular vote makes their voices heard just as much as you can argue that it makes their voices heard LESS. By expanding the boarders through which we consider votes cast, you certainly can marginalize people just as much as you might be including them.
I would say more like this:
"The fairest way to democratically elect our representatives is the national popular vote as we believe all voters should have equal say in their direct representative".
And you know when you don't say that?
When you're a farmer in Nebraska or Kansas or Oklahoma.
NeoGAF's blinders are so infuriating sometimes. You don't even have to agree with me, but no one stops to think that the way that they would like to see the systems of democracy altered in this country is because it aligns just as much with their interests as much as they may find it to be "more fair".