Thanks for letting me live Spoiler You're like a version of the cookie monster for mediocre political opinion links
He'd be a mayor, thats a pretty good life. If we made upstate its ownstate, and kept the senate... how good would that be huh?
that's not any more surprising really than seeing that article in the GARM about Hitler playing the drums
take state populations in 2021: What are the most populated states in the United States? Here is a list of the top ten most populated states in the country: California (Population: 39,613,493) Texas (Population: 29,730,311) Florida (Population: 21,944,577) New York (Population: 19,299,981) Pennsylvania (Population: 12,804,123) Illinois (Population: 12,569,321) Ohio (Population: 11,714,618) Georgia (Population: 10,830,007) North Carolina (Population: 10,701,022) Michigan (Population: 9,992,427) And what about least populated? What are the least populated states in the United States? Here is a list of the top ten least populated states in the country: Wyoming (Population: 581,075) Vermont (Population: 623,251) District of Columbia (Population: 714,153) Alaska (Population: 724,357) North Dakota (Population: 770,026) South Dakota (Population: 896,581) Delaware (Population: 990,334) Rhode Island (Population: 1,061,509) Montana (Population: 1,085,004) Maine (Population: 1,354,522) Rough back of the envelope arithmetic puts the populated states at approximately 180 million people and the least populated states/District of Columbia at approximately 8 million people. With proportional Senate representation of say, one senator per million residents, the most populated states would get 180 senators, whereas six or seven of the least populated states wouldn't even get one Senator; only Rhode Island, Montana, and Maine would cross the million resident threshold. (For the sake of argument though let's say they each get one senator apiece.) What such a system would do is basically just recreate a second House of Representatives. And good luck with getting the people and senators from Texas, say, to act fairly and justly in the best interests of the state of Alaska on any kind of consistent basis.
Could be better then the tyranny of the minority a message lefties and righties can get behind for different reasons I suppose
there are good reasons why the framers of the Constitution did not create a “pure” democracy Ted Lowi used to say if you wanted pure democracy you’d put everyone’s name in a hat and pick your President by pulling out a name
A “pure” democracy (whatever you want to call it I guess) would be whatever the people want it to be, as long as the framework of equal representation voting is maintained. That could be pulling a president from a hat, could be voting for one in a similar manner to what we do now Equal representation does not represent nirvana, nor the netherworld, even if it can be a theoretical pathway to either, its just equal representation Also, I’m not really saying I have a problem with representative democracy either, just that the representation should result from equal representation, which the senate as structured does not allow for.
Is the senate just affirmative action for small states? Something something forcing equal outcomes not equal opportunity, something something equity bad equality good
something like that. look at the states listed above, over half the country's population is in ten states. The less-populated states would be very poor stepchildren without the leveling effects of how the Senate is structured. try the thought experiment of designing a Senate/legislative body with representation apportioned according to acreage. how fair or just would that feel?
Congressional logjam is only a problem because how much power has been concentrated in the hands of the federal government, which the founders never intended. Checks and balance by design slow things down, so it never made sense for central government to wield so much power (and growing). It’s like a street designed with speed bumps to slow traffic, and then funneling more and more traffic through that same street. People then forget why speed bumps were there in the first place. Give fiscal powers back to the states, and that will solve a host of problems. Right now US is a socialist country when it comes to individual states, and that’s how shithole states like Kentucky, Mississippi, Alabama, etc. can continue to suck with impunity. I’d rather states tax 30% and federal government tax 10% than the other way around. TL;DR: federal government is broken because it was never designed to handle so much traffic of money and power. Focus on common defense, diplomacy and interstate disputes, and watch it miraculously work far more efficiently as originally intended.
Right but the government doesn’t represent acres, it’s supposed to represent people Do you personally support affirmative action?