Politics 2020 Field - DNC

Discussion in 'Blazers OT Forum' started by Further, Jan 1, 2019.

  1. Lanny

    Lanny Original Season Ticket Holder "Mr. Big Shot"

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    The spread you lay out is so irresistible that I wish I could drive the 600 miles from Portland just to partake in the food. Damn you, Red Baron.
     
  2. crandc

    crandc Well-Known Member

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    I will post a picture of the table.
     
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  3. Lanny

    Lanny Original Season Ticket Holder "Mr. Big Shot"

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    Everybody likes food. It's a great uniter.
     
  4. e_blazer

    e_blazer Rip City Fan

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    Who said anything about food? She said she’d post a picture of the table. Do you prefer oak or walnut? ;)
     
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  5. Lanny

    Lanny Original Season Ticket Holder "Mr. Big Shot"

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    Walnut, cracked and roasted.
     
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  6. jonnyboy

    jonnyboy Well-Known Member

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    That could be easily turned around by making the claim that popular vote is discrimination and misrepresentation of people in rural areas.
     
  7. andalusian

    andalusian Season - Restarted

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    How? Any one of them gets exactly the same vote as someone from a populated area. How is that discriminatory? Explain to me how the electoral vote does not discriminate against the republican in California whose vote does not count or the Democrat in Alaska whose vote does not count.

    One person, one vote. Nothing is more equal than that.

    Right now, the the system basically says that people in rural areas are more important than people from urban areas. That's discrimination.

    This country was founded on two principals - end taxation without representation and all men are created equal. It's ironic that the 'conservatives' that always go back to the founding fathers are so against these basic principles.
     
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  8. TorturedBlazerFan

    TorturedBlazerFan Well-Known Member

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    Would like to know when I ever “went back to the founding fathers”, Im not 100% averse to a national popular vote, but I see a possibility of unintended consequences as well. I also see it as well our popular vote is state wide, because were members of states, who have a certain number of representatives the popular vote does happen its just at a state to state level.

    Obviously there is a downside to the electoral college as well, I dont feel like my vote is “worth less than a democrats in Oregon” because in Oregon our votes are worth the same. Its just that the state sides with the popular vote. If Im on the losing end, its not really much different to me then when a governer is elected I didn't vote for. Im a member of Oregon, who is a member of a union, and Oregons votes go to represent Oregon voters.
     
  9. tlongII

    tlongII Legendary Poster

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    What do you mean "how?"? People will vote for what they want in their immediate vicinity above all else. That obviously puts the less populous residents of middle America at a disadvantage.
     
  10. andalusian

    andalusian Season - Restarted

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    I guess that I am an American first and Californian second. As such, I know and do not like the fact that my vote is not worth as much as my fellow Americans in less populated parts of the country, despite the fact that a portion of my taxes go to support their area (not something I oppose to, as an American I want to help all Americans) while their taxes do not come to support my area.

    You can't have it both ways, either we are all Americans and support each other or we are not.

    Any way you paint it - the current system is discriminatory.

    I am sure there are always consequences, but I want to get to them form a level and fair starting point. In the current system, I am, to put it bluntly, treated like a second rate citizen (voting wise).
     
  11. TorturedBlazerFan

    TorturedBlazerFan Well-Known Member

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    We want to regulate gun laws state to state, and make it so someone cant buy a gun out of state, each state has their own laws and rules, and out of staters come in and on occasion are discriminated from doing certain things in that state.

    So yes were Americans, but you’re also a californian and Im an Oregonian.

    I understand the point you’re making and again not 100% against it. Just think if they want to go that route it needs to be discussed nationally, its needs regulated and to be more thought out than just, “flip a switch”.

    In terms of what I am “first” I kind of think of it the opposite, the more local, the closer that is to 1st. Like, Husband, Father, Employee, City, County, State, Nation, World. I understand your point, and I appreciate the discussion.
     
  12. jonnyboy

    jonnyboy Well-Known Member

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    Popular vote completely negates the vote of anyone living outside of major metropolitan areas. You say it’s fair, and according to your own metrics (one person one vote) you could technically be right. But there are more factors to consider. How about land mass? Why do people who inhabit 5% of the land mass get to legislate those who inhabit the other 95%? Especially when that 5% has no fucking clue how to live in or care for that 95% of the land, or the unique dynamic living in those areas presents.
     
  13. andalusian

    andalusian Season - Restarted

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    About flipping a switch - I can't imagine it will happen in my life time - but my opinion is that the current system is antiquated and causes more problems than it is worth. The fact is that people move to urban centers - and their "rights" diminish because of it. We already see how much more divided this country is becoming - and I am afraid that there would be a tipping point where the majority will resent more and more being subservient to the minority. This unfortunately usually leads to revolutions.

    FWIW - If California tomorrow decided to fight the rest of the United States and I had to choose who to fight for - it would not be for California. I lived in NY, Oregon, San Francisco and SoCal and loved each and every one of them, I traveled all over the country and again, enjoyed all of it - one of the greatest things about this country is that you can experience different things in different places but still be an American. To me at least, the important word in the country's name is "United" not "States".
     
    Last edited: Sep 5, 2019
  14. andalusian

    andalusian Season - Restarted

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    Because a country is for the people, not for the land. It's really that simple. The country was founded so the people would govern themselves instead of a remote king. It's about the people. You could homestead and own vast land tracts without fighting for independence.

    I will repeat what I said before - the electoral college made sense in the 18 century where people were not able to discuss everything with the candidate and elected officials in real time, where their problems were not going to reach everyone in the union for weeks (or longer as the country expanded). It has lost it's point in the 21st century. You think that people in California do not want to support the people of the Gulf when hurricanes happen? I also do not believe that people in Wyoming want people in urban centers to die from cancer because of smog. If we are one country and we are united - everyone should be equal.
     
    Last edited: Sep 5, 2019
  15. jonnyboy

    jonnyboy Well-Known Member

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    That’s all fine, when it comes to helping and caring for one another the people in this country are far superior than any government could be. I guess the point I’m making is different geographical areas require vastly different legislation. If California and New York get to make all the rules then life changes drastically for those in rural areas, no matter how few and far between they are. I don’t want you to breathe shitty air any more than you want me to get eaten by a bear. That’s why you have DEQ and I have a handgun. People in all areas need to be adequately represented according to their circumstances.
     
  16. andalusian

    andalusian Season - Restarted

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    Explain to me why you, that lives in Wyoming (based on your profile) - is 3 times more important than me in California when we vote for the president and 57 times more important when we vote for the senate? (For the record, my next door neighbor is a Republican and I know for a fact voted for Trump, the idea that we all need to vote by geographic location is absurd).

    Also, allow me to remind you that California produces 13% of the agricultural product of the US - it's not like California is all urban places with no input on rural issues. For the record - there are 3 times as many people living in rural California than Wyoming.

    Anyway you slice it - the electoral college is discriminatory - and is basically making a mockery of the idea of a united and equal country.
     
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  17. e_blazer

    e_blazer Rip City Fan

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    In a lot of ways I agree with you on the popular vote for election of president (although I stand firmly for a thorough debate on the topic before any change to the current system is made). As it stands now, I would agree that the Electoral College process is hardly a "fair" system. I would imagine that California is much like Oregon in terms of its presidential election voting patterns. The last time a presidential candidate won Oregon's electoral votes was in 1988, which effectively means that no Republican votes for president have been "counted" in over 30 years. That's hardly "fair" yet that's what the current electoral college system brings about. There are certainly many Red states where the opposite is true.

    The EC is established by the Constitution so changing to a straight popular vote election would require a constitutional amendment. Politics being what they are, and the constitutional process for amendment being what it is, that's unlikely to happen. The current end around move by Blue states to give all of their electoral votes to the winner of the popular vote has multiple problems, as discussed above in this thread. There's no reason that states couldn't distribute their electors based upon the popular vote in each state election. That doesn't require a constitutional amendment and two states (Maine and Nebraska) already do that. The problem with that, of course, is that each state is independent and can do whatever it wants with its electoral vote process. States where one party has had control for many years are unlikely to give up the iron fist that the dominant party has on its electoral votes. Even if all states agreed to go to a distributional system, there are many ways that it can be gamed to the advantage of one party or the other. See this site for an interesting interactive map: https://www.270towin.com/alternative-electoral-college-allocation-methods/

    Bottom line, if you're looking for "fair" politics isn't your game. In my view, despite all of the consternation that occurs each presidential election cycle when the "wrong" candidate wins, nothing is going to change. The basic problem is the political party process itself. That least democratic of American political institutions is not something that the Constitution mentions or that the Founders even considered. IMO, the notion that two dominant parties should control the entire political landscape in this country is the biggest impediment to the notion of one person, one vote "fairness" in the governance of this country.
     
  18. e_blazer

    e_blazer Rip City Fan

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    I would point out that in many ways California's government is a micro version of what you're calling for in the election of the president. There is a pure popular vote for governor and there's actually been a pretty even split between political parties in electing gubernatorial candidates. Despite that, there are constant calls from rural counties for a State of Jefferson to split off to more "fairly" represent rural interests. I just don't see that we ever get to "fair" in politics.
     
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  19. andalusian

    andalusian Season - Restarted

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    That is an excellent post - and I generally agree with it - I am under no illusion that anything will change any time soon.

    I am tired however of people peddling "independent" and "fair" claims about the electoral college and claiming that the people that want it only want it because they lost the last election. This is grade-a bullshit, and the irony is that the people that call themselves conservatives and adhering to the founding fathers are basically going against the reason we had founding fathers and what they tried to achieve.

    As for Governors in California, California had a democrat governor since 2012, before that Arnold (republican) was governor. Of the last 6 governors - California had 3 Republicans, 3 Democrats. If you actually look at California's long-term history - it was a republican stronghold for a long time - it started to change in the 70s. In a way, Texas is starting to look like California was in the 70s - it becomes younger, more urban and seems to slowly become more Left leaning in the process.
     
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  20. andalusian

    andalusian Season - Restarted

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    I agree. However, the most fair starting point is - everyone has the same rights and the same vote 'weight'. We certainly can not even strive for fair when the starting point is so absurdly tilted.
     

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