Qazaq, are you just arguing straight-up relativism? Where differences of opinion means that there must be no truth?
I have kept trying to focus the debate on systems that favor one party or another.
Because I wanted to avoid this crap that we're in right now. It's a hole with no end.
You can go on and on and on about what is the fairest way to define democracy is, what "more democratic means". What "fairest" means.
Personally, I think it's really frustrating that no one remotely is willing to cede how removing the distinguishing variations between differences of the country can just as much make people feel like their voices aren't being heard.
This whole thing is only relevant because people refuse to consider that the biggest, most national way of counting votes is not intrinsically the "most fair" way to make peoples' voices heard. It's not, and jesus christ, I don't think it takes that much thought to realize that. Why do we have to go into a debate about the point of having rural interests represented and all that? Really? I don't care. The only point is that people would feel that way!
I UNDERSTAND how the national popular vote thing means a democrat in Wyoming is equal to a democrat in California. But the people of Wyoming aren't going to want their population lumped in with California like that. Why? Because Wyoming wants to have the right to say "even though we are only 500,000 people strong and we only have 3 electoral votes, we don't endorse Barack Obama for president and we have the right to say that through our voting!"
But ultimately, it's a mile-long debate I don't care to have! I have to engage in it because people want to drag it there.
Cyan, I think you're right about what I'm saying, but instead of "no truth", I'm just saying, "we can go down this infinite black hole of what constitutes "fair democracy"
OR we can just look at it via which party is systematically helped more.
That's all.