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Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:The president is not the leader of the American people, he is the leader of the union of states.
The people don't elect the president. The states elect the president. If anything, we should give each state one vote instead of weighting it on population.
saxitoxin wrote:The president is not the leader of the American people, he is the leader of the union of states.
jimboston wrote:saxitoxin wrote:The president is not the leader of the American people, he is the leader of the union of states.
The people don't elect the president. The states elect the president. If anything, we should give each state one vote instead of weighting it on population.
Who/what would be the tiebreaker?
Dukasaur wrote:Pack Rat wrote:bigtoughralf wrote:The US and UK systems are the worst of both worlds. Not enough monopoly of power for a single strong party to be able to to engage in long-term work without the distraction of election cycles (e.g. China, Saudi Arabia) and not enough representation to deliver governments and decision-making that actually represent the plurality of opinion in their countries (e.g. Switzerland, Ireland, Netherlands).
Obviously, you want a dictatorship form of government, like Russia, heh. Most of us would rather deal with a messy democracy and speak openly, instead of ending up falling out of a window.
No, I think he was pretty clear with what he typed. A dictatorship is one end of the spectrum that he mentioned, but he very clearly gave equal time to real democracies like Switzerland et al.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:In the 1788 election only 6 of the 14 states had popular votes to choose their electors. Popular voting to choose the Electors was not universalized until 1864.
Pack Rat wrote:Prior to 1789, The President and the Executive Branch was only ceremonial. There were a number of men who held the position of President, until George Washington finally became President in 1789.
Pack Rat wrote:saxitoxin wrote:In the 1788 election only 6 of the 14 states had popular votes to choose their electors. Popular voting to choose the Electors was not universalized until 1864.
Prior to 1789, The President and the Executive Branch was only ceremonial. There were a number of men who held the position of President, until George Washington finally became President in 1789.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:Pack Rat wrote:saxitoxin wrote:In the 1788 election only 6 of the 14 states had popular votes to choose their electors. Popular voting to choose the Electors was not universalized until 1864.
Prior to 1789, The President and the Executive Branch was only ceremonial. There were a number of men who held the position of President, until George Washington finally became President in 1789.
That's a bit of an urban legend. The 14 "presidents" before George Washington had the title of President of the Congress of the Confederation, not President of the United States, and were merely the speakers of the Confederation Congress.
jimboston
- The fact that your “statistics” are based on a ridiculously small sample size. They have no validity.
- The fact that (even if the stats were valid) the voting patterns would change if the election system changed.
Please address these two points with counter-arguments or admit the whole basis for this thread is wrong.
Pack Rat wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Pack Rat wrote:saxitoxin wrote:In the 1788 election only 6 of the 14 states had popular votes to choose their electors. Popular voting to choose the Electors was not universalized until 1864.
Prior to 1789, The President and the Executive Branch was only ceremonial. There were a number of men who held the position of President, until George Washington finally became President in 1789.
That's a bit of an urban legend. The 14 "presidents" before George Washington had the title of President of the Congress of the Confederation, not President of the United States, and were merely the speakers of the Confederation Congress.
How many presidents were there before Washington?
Peyton Randolph: Sep. 5 – Oct. ...
Henry Middleton: Oct. 22 – Oct. ...
Peyton Randolph: May 10 – May 24, 1775.
John Hancock: May 24, 1775 – Oct. 31, 1777.
Henry Laurens: Nov. 1, 1777 – Dec. ...
John Jay: Dec. 10, 1778 – Sep. ...
Samuel Huntington: Sep. ...
Samuel Huntington: Mar.
Urban legend? Sure thing dead boy.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:Pack Rat wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Pack Rat wrote:saxitoxin wrote:In the 1788 election only 6 of the 14 states had popular votes to choose their electors. Popular voting to choose the Electors was not universalized until 1864.
Prior to 1789, The President and the Executive Branch was only ceremonial. There were a number of men who held the position of President, until George Washington finally became President in 1789.
That's a bit of an urban legend. The 14 "presidents" before George Washington had the title of President of the Congress of the Confederation, not President of the United States, and were merely the speakers of the Confederation Congress.
How many presidents were there before Washington?
Peyton Randolph: Sep. 5 – Oct. ...
Henry Middleton: Oct. 22 – Oct. ...
Peyton Randolph: May 10 – May 24, 1775.
John Hancock: May 24, 1775 – Oct. 31, 1777.
Henry Laurens: Nov. 1, 1777 – Dec. ...
John Jay: Dec. 10, 1778 – Sep. ...
Samuel Huntington: Sep. ...
Samuel Huntington: Mar.
Urban legend? Sure thing dead boy.
Like I said, those are Presidents of the Confederation Congress, not Presidents of the United States.
It would be like saying "Joe Biden isn't the only president. There's also Fran Drescher."
(Fran being president of the Screen Actors Guild.)
GaryDenton wrote:You know, this is why I shouldn't argue online. I get nonsense I find it difficult to address.
GaryDenton wrote:jimboston
- The fact that your “statistics” are based on a ridiculously small sample size. They have no validity.
- The fact that (even if the stats were valid) the voting patterns would change if the election system changed.
Please address these two points with counter-arguments or admit the whole basis for this thread is wrong.
My profession was market research, which is statistics and predictions based on statistics. Rarely demographics or other research. Timing of sales and store staffing at a multi-billion dollar company was based on my sales predictions using statistics.
Of all the points to attack, "statistics" is your weakest. I can't even see what this validity and statistics argument refers to.
GaryDenton wrote:And then you don't know the English definition of biased?
GaryDenton wrote:
Yes, voting patterns will change based on how the winners are determined. I don't see any cogent arguments that would change the fact that a large majority of the people want to switch to the winner being the candidate who gets the most votes. A large majority of people are right, it should be.
GaryDenton wrote:The philosophical argument that states should determine the winner and not the people is not how our concepts of American democracy have evolved. Many of the evolving Supreme Court decisions are based on that everyone should have equal representation, one man - one equal vote. The electoral college should be subject to the same principles that now apply to all other elections, at one time States could give more representation to this group of farmers over here or this town of rich people here. That has been done away with. It remains in the ECV system.
GaryDenton wrote:Hypotheticals about the states assigning their electors to the national popular vote winner would be rejected by the people of the states, that is not what is happening. More and more states are signing on.
GaryDenton wrote:Interesting times. Sad times with Fascist ignorance being so prevalent but interesting.
jimboston wrote:If you’re such an expert in statistics then you should understand that Sample Size is important. Sample size is not just a factor of percentage of the population… but additionally there is a bottom-end raw number that needs to be considered for a sample size, and therefore predictions or conditions based on that sample size, to be statistically valid and relevant.
jimboston wrote:GaryDenton wrote:You know, this is why I shouldn't argue online. I get nonsense I find it difficult to address.
You clearly find it “difficult to address” because you have a lack of intelligence. You can’t even comprehend the point made, so you’re unable to formulate a response.GaryDenton wrote:jimboston
- The fact that your “statistics” are based on a ridiculously small sample size. They have no validity.
- The fact that (even if the stats were valid) the voting patterns would change if the election system changed.
Please address these two points with counter-arguments or admit the whole basis for this thread is wrong.
My profession was market research, which is statistics and predictions based on statistics. Rarely demographics or other research. Timing of sales and store staffing at a multi-billion dollar company was based on my sales predictions using statistics.
Of all the points to attack, "statistics" is your weakest. I can't even see what this validity and statistics argument refers to.
If you’re such an expert in statistics then you should understand that Sample Size is important. Sample size is not just a factor of percentage of the population… but additionally there is a bottom-end raw number that needs to be considered for a sample size, and therefore predictions or conditions based on that sample size, to be statistically valid and relevant.
You said that “in modern presidential elections” discrepancies between Popular Vote/Electoral College Victory favored the Republicans…. and that this proved a “Bias”. You stated this without identifying what you consider ‘modern’ but frankly that’s moot. What are you talking about? Two presidential elections where the Republicans won the Presidency but had a lower Popular Vote count? Maybe 3 at most?
That’s like flipping a coin twice and it landing on heads both times, and you claiming that this proves the coin is “biased” towards heads. You’re ridiculous.GaryDenton wrote:And then you don't know the English definition of biased?
Really? We haven’t even discussed the definition. I’ll defer to whatever definition you want… even if it’s a made-up definition that no one else agrees with. The point is that your inference is not supported by the data available; and EVEN IF IT WERE SUPPORTED BY THE DATA the data DOES NOT factor in the counter-factual point that a change in how the winner of the Presidency is determines would certainly change the behavior of all “players”;
-> Voters would modify their vote patterns to account for the new victory conditions.
-> Presidential aspirants would modify their ad buys, rally locations, and other activities based on the new victory conditions.
These may be good… but they render the ability to “prove” what you are claiming impossible without some sort of controlled experiment.GaryDenton wrote:
Yes, voting patterns will change based on how the winners are determined. I don't see any cogent arguments that would change the fact that a large majority of the people want to switch to the winner being the candidate who gets the most votes. A large majority of people are right, it should be.
I agreed that the system may be “antiquated” and it may not reflect the current political situation/identify of our country.
I believe your claim it is “biased” is both false and unsupported.GaryDenton wrote:The philosophical argument that states should determine the winner and not the people is not how our concepts of American democracy have evolved. Many of the evolving Supreme Court decisions are based on that everyone should have equal representation, one man - one equal vote. The electoral college should be subject to the same principles that now apply to all other elections, at one time States could give more representation to this group of farmers over here or this town of rich people here. That has been done away with. It remains in the ECV system.
I never made this argument; though it’s Fact that this was the original principle. Again, your point that we as a people/nation have evolved is valid. So now… without belittling the the original… explain;
1) Why we should make a change. (You have done this to some degree.)
2) How we would make the change. (The cockamamie Pact idea is not gonna fly.)(I think you’d get support from the voters to make the Constitutional Amendment… it I don’t see politicians acting on this idea for AT LEAST the next 20years, if ever.)
There are a LOT of things that the majority of voters would do if given the opportunity….
*Amend the Constitution to eliminate the Electoral College.
*Establish Term Limits for Senate and Congress.
*Establish a retirement age for Senate, Congress, the President, and the Supreme Court.
*End the Abortion Debate ONCE AND FOREVER; setting a ban after 15 weeks except in the case of the health of the mother.
(You don’t need to allow for incest or rape after 15 weeks as presumably these could be addressed in that period.)
That vast majority of voters would support all these…but our elected officials do not and will not act on these unless forced to do so by the united will of the people. Unlikely given that we are as divided and confused as Congress.GaryDenton wrote:Hypotheticals about the states assigning their electors to the national popular vote winner would be rejected by the people of the states, that is not what is happening. More and more states are signing on.
How can you say “that’s not what is happening”? Yes… more STATES are signing on… but does the average voter agree with this idea; and will they continue to agree when the vote goes against them? You’re making a big leap-of-faith into the reliability and will of elected officials to stand by their commitments and believes in the face of massive constituent outrage.GaryDenton wrote:Interesting times. Sad times with Fascist ignorance being so prevalent but interesting.
Oh.. please explain who or what you believe is Fascist Ignorance. You’ve called me ultra-conservative… but I can tell you many of my truly Conservative friends think I’m liberal. People like you are so far to one end of the political spectrum you can truly judge the middle anymore.
I find it funny when I argue Center-Left positions… and I get tagged as ultra conservative. It’s very telling.
bigtoughralf wrote:jimboston wrote:If you’re such an expert in statistics then you should understand that Sample Size is important. Sample size is not just a factor of percentage of the population… but additionally there is a bottom-end raw number that needs to be considered for a sample size, and therefore predictions or conditions based on that sample size, to be statistically valid and relevant.
This sounds like the sort of thing people say when they don't really grasp statistics but think saying 'sample size' enables them to dismiss any number they don't like.
Pack Rat wrote:
Nothing like drowning your opponent with words, ROTFLMAO.
Pack Rat wrote:Nothing like drowning your opponent with words, reading is hard bruh
jimboston wrote:Pack Rat wrote:
Nothing like drowning your opponent with words, ROTFLMAO.
If this is too many words for you to read…
Literally that post would take an average adult of normal intelligence like 15-20 seconds to read.
Pack Rat wrote:jimboston wrote:Pack Rat wrote:
Nothing like drowning your opponent with words, ROTFLMAO.
If this is too many words for you to read…
Literally that post would take an average adult of normal intelligence like 15-20 seconds to read.
You must be a speed reader, lol.
jimboston wrote:Pack Rat wrote:jimboston wrote:Pack Rat wrote:
Nothing like drowning your opponent with words, ROTFLMAO.
If this is too many words for you to read…
Literally that post would take an average adult of normal intelligence like 15-20 seconds to read.
You must be a speed reader, lol.
I just read it and timed myself. Closer to 30 seconds… but seriously it’s not that much for an “adult of normal intelligence”. We’re talking web forums level reading…. not a Physics textbook.
If my post took you more than a minutes to read… it’s a YOU problem.
Also, if you look at his post that I was responding to… you’ll see the response isn’t really much bigger. I deleted some of his original post from the quotes as it was redundant and/or meaningless… but the total word counts are comparable I think.
If you can’t hang at the adult table go back to the little kid table bruh.
Pack Rat wrote:jimboston wrote:Pack Rat wrote:jimboston wrote:Pack Rat wrote:
Nothing like drowning your opponent with words, ROTFLMAO.
If this is too many words for you to read…
Literally that post would take an average adult of normal intelligence like 15-20 seconds to read.
You must be a speed reader, lol.
I just read it and timed myself. Closer to 30 seconds… but seriously it’s not that much for an “adult of normal intelligence”. We’re talking web forums level reading…. not a Physics textbook.
If my post took you more than a minutes to read… it’s a YOU problem.
Also, if you look at his post that I was responding to… you’ll see the response isn’t really much bigger. I deleted some of his original post from the quotes as it was redundant and/or meaningless… but the total word counts are comparable I think.
If you can’t hang at the adult table go back to the little kid table bruh.
You are obviously the smartest kid here with a talent to win girls hearts. We can only wish, if you wrote a book on how to be an intellect and womanizer like yourself.
Pack Rat wrote:You are obviously the smartest kid here with a talent to win girls hearts. We can only wish, if you wrote a book on how to be an intellect and womanizer like yourself.
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