QuickTidal, on 08 May 2020 - 07:26 PM, said:
Mentalist, on 08 May 2020 - 06:33 PM, said:
QuickTidal, on 08 May 2020 - 04:14 PM, said:
Tavvar, on 08 May 2020 - 01:29 PM, said:
Someone noted it above, but one on the biggest problems in US elections is that how elections are run is not in the Constitution, so its left to the states. So we have 50 different types of elections, all with unique rules based on who the government wants to vote. There are a lot of tools that the governing party can do to change who votes (assigning pooling places, voter ID, who is on voter rolls, time polls are open, early voting, gerrymandering, etc). One of the worst cases recently is the 2018 Georgia governor's race: the Republican candidate was the Secretary of State who controls elections and he purged the voter rolls prior to the election, and I believe he cleared off more people than the final margin that he won by over Stacy Abrahms. Allowing the guy in charge of running elections run for office is insane.
This state-by-state system leads to a whole mess of elections. Some states have long voting hours, some are short. Some have lots of early and weekend voting, others don't. Some require voter ID, some don't, all allow different types of ID. On the bright side, Republicans can't suppress all votes nationally, but with the Electoral College and Senate, they don't need to. Gerrymandering is the worst way to make changes because it allows politicians to pick their voters. For example, last year I lived in Ohio, which is about 55/45 Republican/Democrat, but the state legislature is over 2/3 Republican. Both parties have and do gerrymander, but it got worse in 2010 when the Tea Party Wave swept Republicans into power across the country. They then used computers to very carefully draw districts lines to try and guarantee a majority (example: my district in Columbus, OH included my neighborhood in the Western part of the city and a huge swath of rural land to the South- so they took the Democratic voters in my area, and stuck them in a Republican district. Most of the Columbus districts are like this, huge rural districts that take a small piece of the city to dilute Democratic votes.
@Garak- Yes, the Electoral College determines the Presidential Election. It was developed by the Founders to put distance between the People and the election of the President. People were supposed to vote for an Elector (smart, well-respected guy in town) to vote for them. The Founders were trying to avoid this exact situation because they did not trust the population at large to make good decisions. But it's never really worked as intended. Now it breaks the election into a race in 12 states, while Republicans in California and New York, and Democrats in Texas have no say in who becomes President.
Hmm, that became an essay. I have a History/Poli Sci degree and was bored during a meeting....
The
United States was good on paper....but when it comes to executing things as a country, they SUCK and at least some of that really does come from individual States acting like little mini-countries. You're either UNITED or you're not...you can't be both clearly because it results in the most divided country.
I mean, Switzerland is a confederatin, and they made it work.... it's not impossible.
Indeed, but Switzerland is likely the exception to the rule.
Americans are currently protesting their right to go out and not only possibly die, but that they should be able to threaten others with death too....because Freedom...the whole country is built around chest-thumping, flag waving "freedom"...until it inconveniences them...then they have no trouble threatening everyone else.
What blows my mind is that late stage capitalism has literally lead to a whole swathe of people super struggling to last out the pandemic because they don't have savings (and probably never did)....but and in a lot of cases voted for there very fat cats who KEEP them down under late stage capitalism...I saw a woman on tiktok ranting about how she's poor and can't make ends meet during this lockdown, so they need to "OPEN UP!" according to her....and then I learned she's an R voter...and I'm like, bitch you VOTED for the people doing this to you...it's not the lockdown, its the billionaires buying into politics and keeping you poor.
'We're Still Living and Dying in the Slaveholders' Republic
The pandemic has brought the latest battle in the long American war over communal well-being.
[...] Slaveholders desired a state that wholly secured their individual freedom to enslave, not to mention their freedom to disenfranchise, to exploit, to impoverish, to demean, and to silence and kill the demeaned.
The freedom to. The freedom to harm. Which is to say, in coronavirus terms, the freedom to infect.
Slaveholders disavowed a state that secured any form of communal freedom—the freedom of the community from slavery, from disenfranchisement, from exploitation, from poverty, from all the demeaning and silencing and killing.
The freedom from. The freedom from harm. Which is to say, in coronavirus terms, the freedom from infection.
The slaveholder's freedom to seceded from Lincoln's "house divided against itself"—divided between the freedom to and from. Memminger was named the Confederate secretary of the Treasury. Americans went to war. Americans are still waging this same war, now over COVID-19. There is a war between those fighting to open America back up for the sake of individual freedom, and those fighting to keep America closed for the sake of community freedom. A civil war over the very meaning, the very utility of freedom.
[...] From the beginning of the American project, the powerful individual has been battling for his constitutional freedom to harm, and the vulnerable community has been battling for its constitutional freedom from harm. Both freedoms were inscribed into the U.S. Constitution, into the American psyche. The history of the United States, the history of Americans, is the history of reconciling the unreconcilable: individual freedom and community freedom. There is no way to reconcile the enduring psyche of the slaveholder with the enduring psyche of the enslaved.
'
https://www.theatlan...s-trump/611083/
'The very idea that it doesn't matter what happens to the larger community, so long as the individual has unfettered freedom to do as he pleases, is not just a vestige of the slaveholder ethos. As Charlie Warzel points out this week, this has been the core animating theory behind the American gun rights movement: reduce the debate to an absolutist fight about freedom that eventually narcotizes an entire population into believing that the cost of true liberty is tens of thousands of avoidable gun deaths each year. Any effort to regulate anything within the vast space between "assault weapons for everyone on demand" and "reasonable gun safety" is cast as a dire step toward tyranny. As Warzel puts it, this leads to another version of freedom to, in this case, the freedom to either do mass harm or the freedom to insist that nothing be done about it:
This idea of freedom is also an excuse to serve one's self before others and a shield to hide from responsibility. In the gun rights fight, that freedom manifests in firearms falling into unstable hands. During a pandemic, that freedom manifests in rejections of masks, despite evidence to suggest they protect both the wearers and the people around them. It manifests in a rejection of public health by those who don't believe their actions affect others. In this narrow worldview, freedom has a price, in the form of an "acceptable" number of human lives lost. It's a price that will be calculated and then set by a select few. The rest of us merely pay it.
We now find ourselves on the precipice of a moment in which Americans must decide whether the price they are willing to pay for the "freedom" of armed protesters, those determined to block hospitals, and pundits who want to visit the zoo, is their own health and safety. Polls show that the majority of Americans are still deeply devoted to the proposition that their government can protect them from a deadly virus, and that they trust their governors and scientists and data far more than they trust the Mission Accomplished Industrial Complex that would have them valuing free-floating ideas about liberty over the health and indeed lives of essential workers, the elderly, and their own well-being, despite the president's recent insistence that this is what, all of us, as "warriors" must do. As Jamil Smith points out, this cultish view of "liberty" as demanding mass death in exchange for "liberty," as in "freedom to" is an assembly-line, AstroTurf version of liberty pushed by those who are already very free. "Their true goal, plutocracy, is the diametrical opposite of freedom," Smith writes. "It is a life lived to spite other lives, and often take advantage of them.
In the coming weeks, we will see some relatively small portion of Americans with great big megaphones and well-financed backers start to openly attack the selfsame health care workers who were celebrated as heroes just a few weeks ago. We will see attacks on people wearing masks and attacks on people lawfully asking others to wear masks. Some leaders will buckle under the pressure to rescind orders with claims that in choosing between liberty and death, they went with liberty. [...] A good rule of thumb for COVID-based discussions about "opening up" is that if someone is demanding it while threatening to hurt or kill you, you are probably not as "free" as they are, and that their project does nothing to increase freedom in America and everything to hoard a twisted idea of freedom for themselves.
When you hear someone demanding inchoate generalized "freedom," ask whether he cares at all that millions of workers who clean the zoos and buff the nails and intubate the grandmas are not free. These people are cannon fodder for your liberty.'
https://slate.com/ne...-hierarchy.html
This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 09 May 2020 - 12:10 AM