leah wrote:it seems like the way things are now, the big-population states have all the say. i feel like as a nebraskan, my vote means nothing because we have so few electoral votes and the majority (or all, i'm not sure) of them are republican, which is not how i would choose to vote at all :\
Well, it works both ways...
Say you are in a 'high population' state like Texas with 24 million people. Just for argument's sake, we'll say 50% vote. So... 12 million voters. In 2004, Houston and Austin (Texas' 1st and 4th largest cities) voted Democrat, along with several other counties. That's 6 million people, or 3 million 'blue' votes. If the rest of the state voted Republican, it's 9 million to 3 million. So, the electoral college votes went to Bush.
Nebraska, on the other hand, has 1.8 million people, or 900,000 voters. Nebraska was a 'red' state. Even if you had a dramatic 51/49 split, you are still only looking at 441,000 'blue' voters that feel like they wasted their vote.
So, you have 3 million people in a 'powerful' state who feel like their vote was wasted, and 441k (actually, it's was around 75k who voted 'blue') in Nebraska who echo those sentiments. Imagine living in Houston - the 4th largest city in America. Democrats are a fairly large majority down there. You live in a giant city and all of your friends, all of your coworkers and neighbors all share the same political views that you hold. Yet, your vote is wasted because of the assholes in San Antonio and DFW. What is more frustrating - belonging to a tiny minority in the 38th most populous state, in the 42nd largest city (Omaha, I'm assuming), or voting with the large majority in the 4th largest city, in the 2nd largest state?