Moderator: Dictators in Training
Gaazy wrote:Now vonk on the other hand, is one of the most self absorbed know it alls in my memory of this site. Ive always thought so, and I still cant understand why in gods name he is here
Martrae wrote:penetration
Martrae wrote:Gidan wrote:lyion wrote:Fair enough.Diekan wrote:1. What has Bush done over the past 5 years that gives you cause to support him fully?
He was democratically elected to the white house. Due to this, I support him as our President, and voice my opposition to things he proposes which I do not agree with in a positive manner
Did you support him when he was in the white house even though he Gore was democratically elected?
Again for possible penetration. We are NOT a democracy. We are a Constitutional Republic. We are run by the Rule of Law not mob rule.
I support Bush because I think he's probably one of the more forward thinking Presidents we've had. He takes the long view of things.
In the last 5 years he has helped the economy slowly turn around after dual disasters of Sept 11 and the dot com burst. He has caused a domino effect in the Middle East and my children will reap the benefit from that. Since he has been in office our personal income has doubled and our quality of life has drastically improved.
Gidan wrote:and not that he was democraticly elected.
So the US is not a democracy, yet we claim to be spreading democracy to the world. Why do we bother calling it a democracy, the people dont have a say. Why do we claim that this is a govn't for the people by the people when the people dont have an equal say in that gov't.
What harm would be caused if we actually let the people elect the leader of the Nation?
Gidan wrote:So basicly if you want more of a say in who becomes president, you need to pick what state you choose to live in much more carefully. For example its beter to live in Alaska then Florida if you want some sort of say.
Gidan wrote:How can somone be deomcratically elected and not be elected by the people?
There shoudl be states, there should be a bill of rights, there should be a constitution. However when electing a president I beleive that the people's vote should be meaningful. My vote in the state of TX mean nothing, it would make do difference if I voted or not.
My vote for president should be just as important as the person who lives next door and who lives across the country. My vote shouldn't be less important becaue I live in TX then it would be if I lived in Alaska.
xaoshaen wrote:Gidan wrote:How can somone be deomcratically elected and not be elected by the people?
There shoudl be states, there should be a bill of rights, there should be a constitution. However when electing a president I beleive that the people's vote should be meaningful. My vote in the state of TX mean nothing, it would make do difference if I voted or not.
Your vote in the state of Texas would mean nothing regardless of whether we elect a President directly by popular acclaim or not.My vote for president should be just as important as the person who lives next door and who lives across the country. My vote shouldn't be less important becaue I live in TX then it would be if I lived in Alaska.
Again, proportionality. You haven't lessened the impact of your vote by living in Texas.
xaoshaen wrote:Gidan wrote:and not that he was democraticly elected.
Actually, you can still say that the United States chooses its President democratically.
Gidan wrote:xaoshaen wrote:Gidan wrote:and not that he was democraticly elected.
Actually, you can still say that the United States chooses its President democratically.
So you can actually claim that 2 different people were democratically elected?
Gidan wrote:The only other thing that isn't voted on by the people that I think should be is impeachment. I think that a national election should take place on whether the people beleive the house should impeach the president. If the people think he should, then send it to the senate.
Gidan wrote:Actually if the president were elected through pupular vote, my vote would go toward the person I choose to vote for and be counted in the finally tally. In TX a VERY republican state, my vote for a democrat is lost because it will not overturn the state and not be counted in a tally across all states.
And proportionaly my vote would mean more in the state of Alaska then it would in Florida, TX or Cal. Alaska has a much better ratio of voters to electoral votes then the large states listed.
xaoshaen wrote:Gidan wrote:xaoshaen wrote:Gidan wrote:and not that he was democraticly elected.
Actually, you can still say that the United States chooses its President democratically.
So you can actually claim that 2 different people were democratically elected?
No.
Gidan wrote:No we shouldn't get rid of all those things. I beleive that the system we have is very important. However I think that the leaders should be elected by the people. The Senate and House reps should be elected by popular votes in their respective states to represent them.
xaoshaen wrote:Gidan wrote:Actually if the president were elected through pupular vote, my vote would go toward the person I choose to vote for and be counted in the finally tally. In TX a VERY republican state, my vote for a democrat is lost because it will not overturn the state and not be counted in a tally across all states.
The electoral college hasn't rendered your vote any more meaningless than would a majority voting against you on a referendum. It's just occuring at a different level within the process. I'm not really a big fan of the electoral college myself, but it doesn't somehow negate the vote of the American people.And proportionaly my vote would mean more in the state of Alaska then it would in Florida, TX or Cal. Alaska has a much better ratio of voters to electoral votes then the large states listed.
A bit, but not enough to be statistically significant issue, particularly since Alaska has a grand total of three electoral votes. When was the last time you heard a campaign talking about the need to swing Alaska?
Harrison wrote:I live in MA so I am on the opposite spectrum than you Gidan almost perfectly. I still voted for Bush. It wasn't "meaningless", I still put in a vote for who I wanted president. Which is the entire point of voting.
Gidan wrote:Let me try and rephrase it them.
Lets look at this being generous with the democrat numbers. TX votes about 60/40 republican.
The Nation as a whole votes about 50/50 going back and forth between democrats and republicans as far as who is in the majority.
Dem's havn't won a TX presidential election since 1976 and the gap is getting wider not smaller.
Where the country as a whole will go back and forth between Dem and Rep, TX will not. As long as TX as a whole is going to vote Republican, the votes for the dem canidate in this state become meaningless. What that means is that those Dem votes are lost, they dont have any effect on the election, the only votes that mattered were the votes for the rep candidate.
If you look at the nation as a whole though and included the votes of all the people as spererate people you will see that the results of the election will at times be different that that of the states. With our current system, 1 candidate could conceivable win by a landslide over the other while still losing the actual election. Does that seem right?
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