This is not a logical argument, it is merely an axiomatic assertion. I have no reason to accept it.
"I live in a post-facts world" would take fewer words to type.
This is not a logical argument, it is merely an axiomatic assertion. I have no reason to accept it.
This is not a logical argument, it is merely an axiomatic assertion. I have no reason to accept it.
"I live in a post-facts world" would take fewer words to type.
You have no reason to reject it either as it is also not logical for an election system where most people get a vote, but some votes count more than others.
The question becomes: What principles do we admire, fairness for all or the accumulation of power by a few?
You have no reason to reject it either as it is also not logical for an election system where most people get a vote, but some votes count more than others.
The question becomes: What principles do we admire, fairness for all or the accumulation of power by a few?
Well shocking the board's leading Trump cultist sees nothing wrong with Trump being in power despite most peopling not supporting him
Minority white rule is good, that's the message from the Trumpsters.
Make Apartheid Great Again!
You say that as if that's the dichotomy. But it isn't. A "fair" voting system can still produce accumulation of power by a few.
It can hardly be fair if some people's votes are inherently worth more than others'.
It can hardly be fair if some people's votes are inherently worth more than others'.
You misunderstand. By concentrating power into the hands of the few, I'm referring to some people's votes being worth more than others'. I'm not specifically referring to the Republican's current power grab, despite representing fewer Americans than the Democrats.No, it isn't maximally fair. But why is that a problem? You yourself only mentioned fairness as a means of achieving a more important end, avoiding the concentration of power into the hands of a few.
That seems irrelevant, since minority rule outcomes aren't necessarily good outcomes either.There are more important things than maximal fairness, and fair outcomes aren't necessarily good outcomes.
You misunderstand. By concentrating power into the hands of the few, I'm referring to some people's votes being worth more than others'. I'm not specifically referring to the Republican's current power grab, despite representing fewer Americans than the Democrats.
That seems irrelevant, since minority rule outcomes aren't necessarily good outcomes either.
You misunderstand. By concentrating power into the hands of the few, I'm referring to some people's votes being worth more than others'.
That seems irrelevant, since minority rule outcomes aren't necessarily good outcomes either.
Perhaps you don't understand the terms, then.Then your definition of "few" is pure nonsense. So is your definition of "concentrating".
What is your goal, that is more important than fairness in an electoral process?That's true, they aren't necessarily better. Which is why that's not a goal for me.
Perhaps you don't understand the terms, then.
Just because you don't like the implications does not mean that what I said was wrong.
What is your goal, that is more important than fairness in an electoral process?
True. You're wrong because millions and millions of people aren't "few", and power isn't concentrated when they have only marginally more influence with their votes.
How do you find it to be reasonably fair?First off, note I said "maximal fairness". Our electoral system is still reasonably fair, honestly.
How do you think the Electoral College does this better than a direct election of the President?Producing good outcomes is more important than maximal fairness. That's hard to engineer into a system, though, so I'll settle for something a little more practical to achieve: protecting federalist structure of our government.
2 or 3 times or more than some states is only marginally more influence, huh?
With those states, you can win the Presidency with only 21.91% of the popular vote. That is a touch more than "marginal", I'd say.Given how little influence their more powerful vote still has, yes, it's marginal.