Country people don't answer phone calls from strange numbers.
Quote from: DAS B00T x2 on November 09, 2016, 03:54:15 PMCountry people don't answer phone calls from strange numbers.The country vote was denied to Clinton from the start. It's so consistent that those numbers are known. The surprises were in more developed areas
Hillary was leading by large margins.
Quote from: MyNameIsCharlie on November 09, 2016, 03:51:47 PMHillary was leading by large margins. The bullshit thing is that she got the majority of the votes, she only lost due to the electoral vote.
Under-polling of working-class disaffected whites, shy Trump voters and an over-reliance of the Democrats on the Hispanic vote and states like Wisconsin.
She got a fifth of a percentage more last I checked, and she was far below Trump in the popular vote before California came in.The point of the electoral college is to ensure that densely populated urban centers (read: California) cannot run the country by themselves. It did its job.
The electoral college worked as intended. It evened out the representation to the states. The alternative would have NY, CA, and TX ultimately calling the shots for the rest of the nation. Popular vote only works if everyone is spread evenly throughout the nation.
Quote from: Mr Deplorable on November 09, 2016, 05:54:49 PMShe got a fifth of a percentage more last I checked, and she was far below Trump in the popular vote before California came in.The point of the electoral college is to ensure that densely populated urban centers (read: California) cannot run the country by themselves. It did its job.Quote from: MyNameIsCharlie on November 09, 2016, 05:52:18 PMThe electoral college worked as intended. It evened out the representation to the states. The alternative would have NY, CA, and TX ultimately calling the shots for the rest of the nation. Popular vote only works if everyone is spread evenly throughout the nation.How on earth is this a valid argument for the electoral college? Popular vote doesn't give a shit about borders, unlike the electoral system, and major urban areas (such as New York, California, and Texas) are only ~15% of the US population.
Quote from: Kupo & the Two G-strings on November 09, 2016, 07:02:50 PMQuote from: Mr Deplorable on November 09, 2016, 05:54:49 PMShe got a fifth of a percentage more last I checked, and she was far below Trump in the popular vote before California came in.The point of the electoral college is to ensure that densely populated urban centers (read: California) cannot run the country by themselves. It did its job.Quote from: MyNameIsCharlie on November 09, 2016, 05:52:18 PMThe electoral college worked as intended. It evened out the representation to the states. The alternative would have NY, CA, and TX ultimately calling the shots for the rest of the nation. Popular vote only works if everyone is spread evenly throughout the nation.How on earth is this a valid argument for the electoral college? Popular vote doesn't give a shit about borders, unlike the electoral system, and major urban areas (such as New York, California, and Texas) are only ~15% of the US population.Politicians would only pay attention to NYC, Boston, Atlanta, Miami, Chicago, Dallas, San Francisco, Seattle, Los Angeles, and San Diego. These cities make up the majority of the US population. If you live outside them, your voice isn't heard.
Secondly, under the electoral system, the folks who don't vote with the flow of their state are essentially going unheard. Anyone who voted for Trump in a state like New York effectively wasted their vote.
Kind of a poor argument, since the same could be made about voting against the winning side in a pure democracy (which, it's important to point out, doesn't exist in any Western country).
Quote from: TurkTurkBangBang on November 09, 2016, 07:16:23 PMKind of a poor argument, since the same could be made about voting against the winning side in a pure democracy (which, it's important to point out, doesn't exist in any Western country).Sure, if you're going to boil down democracy to 'canceled out votes' (a cancerous attitude promoted by establishment types to discourage turnout).
I've yet to see a valid argument in favor of that.
...That's exactly what you're saying. I completely disagree that just because one doesn't vote with the winning side, that their vote is unheard or meaningless.
You are literally saying that under our system, votes not in line with the majority (which is how electoral votes are allotted except in Maine and Nebraska) are unheard, or cancelled.
http://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/fed68.asp
The electoral college obviously failed in preventing an unfit person from becoming president.
Quote from: Kupo & the Two G-strings on November 09, 2016, 07:59:00 PMThe electoral college obviously failed in preventing an unfit person from becoming president.By whose judgement? There's certainly nothing in the constitution defining Trump as unfit. But, of course, you don't mean he's technically ineligible, you just mean you consider him to be unfit.
The institutions of your republic were not built with your preferences in mind.
Quote from: MyNameIsCharlie on November 09, 2016, 07:08:19 PMQuote from: Kupo & the Two G-strings on November 09, 2016, 07:02:50 PMQuote from: Mr Deplorable on November 09, 2016, 05:54:49 PMShe got a fifth of a percentage more last I checked, and she was far below Trump in the popular vote before California came in.The point of the electoral college is to ensure that densely populated urban centers (read: California) cannot run the country by themselves. It did its job.Quote from: MyNameIsCharlie on November 09, 2016, 05:52:18 PMThe electoral college worked as intended. It evened out the representation to the states. The alternative would have NY, CA, and TX ultimately calling the shots for the rest of the nation. Popular vote only works if everyone is spread evenly throughout the nation.How on earth is this a valid argument for the electoral college? Popular vote doesn't give a shit about borders, unlike the electoral system, and major urban areas (such as New York, California, and Texas) are only ~15% of the US population.Politicians would only pay attention to NYC, Boston, Atlanta, Miami, Chicago, Dallas, San Francisco, Seattle, Los Angeles, and San Diego. These cities make up the majority of the US population. If you live outside them, your voice isn't heard.Firstly, since those are largely in 'established territory,' which is to say most of them are not in swing states, they don't get much attention relative to their populations. Swing states get a disproportionate amount of attention because of this.Secondly, under the electoral system, the folks who don't vote with the flow of their state are essentially going unheard. Anyone who voted for Trump in a state like New York effectively wasted their vote.SpoilerI consider a vote an extension of free speech, so on principle I don't believe a vote can be wasted. However, that doesn't matter as far as the electoral system is concerned.
Politicians would only pay attention to NYC, Boston, Atlanta, Miami, Chicago, Dallas, San Francisco, Seattle, Los Angeles, and San Diego.
If you live outside them, your voice isn't heard.
in 2012 it was Romney