Harrison wrote:For blind "fairness and equality"...
So, who would drive this change within a state? Think carefully before you answer.
Moderator: Dictators in Training
Harrison wrote:I wouldn't want it, fuck no.
I was answering to what I believe is what most people would think.
xaoshaen wrote:Gidan wrote:Based on those states. it would take 41,436,740 votes to elect a president regardless of what the other 252,218,664 people voted.
Not only is this inaccurate, but you're still missing the point. You're addressing a symptom, not a problem.
xaoshaen wrote:Gidan wrote:What are the obvious reasons?
Ask yourself, why would a state decide to divide their vote?
lyion wrote:Gidan you completely missed Xao's extremely good point about the REAL problem in elections right now. Which is Congressional Apportionment. You do realize California sets up its congressional districts in an attempt to grab more seats in the house than they should based on zoning? Thus, many Republicans are unfairly disenfranchised and do not get their fair amount of representation in Congress.
This is a bigger isseut than a democratic election you didn't like that was essentially a tie and was determined by Federalism, as it should be.
Yet you completely missed that point. Why?
Gidan wrote:How is that not accurate? Those 41,436,740 votes is the total number of votes based on 50.1% of the vote in every one of those states. That would result in 272 electoral votes assuming that all electoral votes went to the cadidate.
Well if the state is divided why would the people in the state be aposed to splitting the vote? The people in the majority now may be upset because they feel they are losing votes, however the people in the minority on that vote wouldn't be upset to see their vots going toward something. Although I guess actual representation of the will of the people is a bad thing in this country.
Gidan wrote:First what source do you recomend for population?
Maybe the people in the majority at the time need to realize they will not always be in the majority. I guess I give people to much credit for inteliigence.
Gidan wrote:I do understand that TX could change from being a Rep state to a Dem state, I am not that ignorant. I was going based on the trend in the state. That doesn't change my view. I had the same view when I lived in NY, even though I was in the majority. I have always felt that both the votes of the majority and the minority should be counted.
Gidan wrote:You are correct, I screwed up the numbers.
84,383,107 votes is required to elect a president. Somewhere my other number got divided by 2.
However the point still stands The US population is 295,507,134. It takes 84,383,107 votes to elect a president while the other 211,124,027 people could vote any way they wanted and it couldn't change the election.
Cadidate A - 84,383,107 (29%) votes
Cadidate B - 211,124,027 (71%) votes
Cadidate A wins with less then 1/3 of the vote.
xaoshaen wrote:Gidan wrote:You are correct, I screwed up the numbers.
84,383,107 votes is required to elect a president. Somewhere my other number got divided by 2.
However the point still stands The US population is 295,507,134. It takes 84,383,107 votes to elect a president while the other 211,124,027 people could vote any way they wanted and it couldn't change the election.
Cadidate A - 84,383,107 (29%) votes
Cadidate B - 211,124,027 (71%) votes
Cadidate A wins with less then 1/3 of the vote.
So essentially, you've changed your objection to the Electoral College to an issue with the way the votes are apportioned? Fair enough, but if I were you, I'd be a whole hell of a lot more concerned about the Congressional appointments, especially since the numerical objection to the EC is a boundary condition issue, rather than a practical one.
Gidan wrote:My whole issue with the EC is that there is so much room for it to completely misrepresent the people. It it where changed to a system when the peopel are beter represented such as with split voting, I would have no issue with it.
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.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 16 guests