As to the petition, while Cohen writes that the current rule (that can be changed if the crooks decide to in a New York minute from now) that a candidate needs 15% in some polls [to take part in national TV debates] is arbitrary, his petition says it should be lowered to 5%, which is also arbitrary. I'd propose that the criterium should be the percentage of voters that have the candidate on their ballot - as this already requires certain amounts of public support, being far more accurate than some polling maybe rigged by the same characters. Let's say 90%, which Stein and Johnson both fulfill (I think).
Green Party Campaign said:Dear Mr. Trump and Secretary Clinton:
In the spirit of democracy, we are writing to ask that you support open debates in 2016 that include all of the Presidential and Vice Presidential candidates who are on enough ballots to win at least 270 electoral college votes. [...]
Two candidates who have virtually no support are trying to change the rules in their favor? And this is news?Stein and Baraka wrote an open letter to Killary and Teh Donald with an even less arbitrary (and therefore better) proposal than mine - it just says there should be a theoretical chance to win:
Less than 5% of voters (Stein) and less than 10% (Johnson) is certainly virtually no support. Less than 1% chance of getting elected is similarly virtually no chance.They collectively have the support of around 1 in 7 likely voters. That is not "virtually no support."
Less than 5% of voters (Stein) and less than 10% (Johnson) is certainly virtually no support. Less than 1% chance of getting elected is similarly virtually no chance.
Elitist BS. As far I am concerned, people having literally milions of votes (in addition hopeless one, to be "wasted") deserve to be heard.
This kind of attitude is just minior example of third party suppression in "democracy" of USA (main example is of course political system itself that pretty much forces two-party system), but it is telling.
I find your comparison disingenuous and not applicable. But I will indulge you anyway.Let's say that there was a proposal to create a national sales tax, and polls found it had 3.4%* support, and a proposal to ban bicycles had 8.9%** support.
Yes. Millions of votes is not "virtually no support". Side note, "virtually" is weasel wording. Nice job!Would you challenge a claim that these proposals had virtually no support,
I agree that chance of that is very low. It is not reason to refuse any discussion at all.and virtually no chance of passing?
I find your comparison disingenuous and not applicable. But I will indulge you anyway.
Yes. Millions of votes is not "virtually no support". Side note, "virtually" is weasel wording. Nice job!
I agree that chance of that is very low. It is not reason to refuse any discussion at all.
I still stand by "elitist BS" assessment. In fact, in this case (I mean election, not "national sales tax/bicycle ban" nonsense) this kind of tactic is one of reasons why % is so low.
In other words, you surpress voice and then argue that there is so few voices so we can surpress it anyway. Good job, you made world a little worse place!
I am talking about you not wanting "random nut-job" letting into debate, not "pointing out" anything. Participation in debate would make them more popular, or at least more recognizable. Do you deny it?No, by pointing out that third party candidates have virtually no support, and virtually no chance of winning, rational people are not "suppressing" the vote.
Non-sequitur (it does NOT follow that letting Stein or Johnson into debate means that we let in every citizen of USA) and complete nonsense anyway, because it is literally impossible to end up with a debate with 300mil people where every one of them has few million votes.It is not elitist BS to not allow any random nut-job with no hope of winning to enter the debate, so it is also not elitist BS to not allow a third-party candidate with no hope of winning to enter the debate. Otherwise, we end up with a debate among 300 million people,
I am talking about you not wanting "random nut-job" letting into debate, not "pointing out" anything. Participation in debate would make them more popular, or at least more recognizable. Do you deny it?
Non-sequitur (it does NOT follow that letting Stein or Johnson into debate means that we let in every citizen of USA) and complete nonsense anyway, because it is literally impossible to end up with a debate with 300mil people where every one of them has few million votes.
For example, if we set cutoff at 3 million votes (1% of 300 mil), then at most we can get 100 people, and in practice significantly less, since people with most support will have way more votes than 3 mil, taking them away from pool of possible votes.
It is pretty obvious that for you right amount of people in debate is exactly two and rest of udeserving rabble can go and do anatomically impossible thing to themself. Elitist BS much?
Never claimed otherwise. You are one peddling nonsense strawman about 300 mil people in presidential debate.I am glad we agree that there must be a cutoff on allowing people into the debate.
That was example number. It is nice, round and relatively low number. Yes, it is feature. You seem to think that we should put as high number as we can get away with. Rabble out!You seem to think that 3 million votes, before the votes are held, is a good cuttoff. Can you explain why you picked that number
For some reason I find very funny that you make big deal from trivially true fact that loser in 2nd place will have by definition more votes than loser in 3rd place.considering that the losing candidate got over 20 times that number of votes last election?
It interest me more what is YOUR number? Let me guess, any number that lets two top contenders in and rest of peasants out.3 million sounds impressive until you realize that over 126 million voted last election.
Never claimed otherwise. You are one peddling nonsense strawman about 300 mil people in presidential debate.
That was example number. It is nice, round and relatively low number. Yes, it is feature. You seem to think that we should put as high number as we can get away with. Rabble out!
For some reason I find very funny that you make big deal from trivially true fact that loser in 2nd place will have by definition more votes than loser in 3rd place.
It interest me more what is YOUR number? Let me guess, any number that lets two top contenders in and rest of peasants out.
Nope. I am the one claiming we can't just allow any random person in to the debates,
I'm not sure why you keep erecting these strawmen. No one is suggesting that" any random person" be in the debates. I would suggest that anyone on the ballot in enough states to gather 270 electoral hours should be in the debate. Up above in the thread you ridiculously said that you have the same chance of winning as Stein. She is, however, on the ballot in enough states to gather 270 electors. I gather that you are not on enough state ballots to win?
Stein has virtually no chance of winning. We all agree on this. There is no need for you to use straw man arguments and hyperbole. It's a reasonable claim that you are making.
However -- One in seven likely voters is not "virtually no support. ". Sorry, but you were wrong when you said that and I'm not going to engage in silly hypotheticals about taxes to prove it. Again, there's no need for you to make a false argument when your actual argument is just fine.
I am curious, though. Why would you not want Miss Stein in the debate?
Where is this 1 in 7 number coming from? I missed it and can't reconcile 4% which is 4 in 100 or 0.4 in 10.I'm not sure why you keep erecting these strawmen. No one is suggesting that" any random person" be in the debates. I would suggest that anyone on the ballot in enough states to gather 270 electoral hours should be in the debate. Up above in the thread you ridiculously said that you have the same chance of winning as Stein. She is, however, on the ballot in enough states to gather 270 electors. I gather that you are not on enough state ballots to win?
Stein has virtually no chance of winning. We all agree on this. There is no need for you to use straw man arguments and hyperbole. It's a reasonable claim that you are making.
However -- One in seven likely voters is not "virtually no support. ". Sorry, but you were wrong when you said that and I'm not going to engage in silly hypotheticals about taxes to prove it. Again, there's no need for you to make a false argument when your actual argument is just fine.
I am curious, though. Why would you not want Miss Stein in the debate?
I think he is getting 1 in 7 by finding the best poll for Stein, and the best poll for Johnson, and adding them together with every single other fringe candidate. Stein's polling average is 3.4%, which I get as 1 in 29.Where is this 1 in 7 number coming from? I missed it and can't reconcile 4% which is 4 in 100 or 0.4 in 10.
I don't think she belongs in the debate because she is not a serious contender for POTUS. She would just be getting free air time for flakey ideas at the public's expense.
No one proposed "allowing any random person in to the debates". Nice strawman.Nope. I am the one claiming we can't just allow any random person in to the debates,
Why do you think my "3 mil votes" is based on something that not yet happened? Any reasonable human would think it is more like "count of votes based on polls" or something like that - possible to determine right now. Looks like you aren't reasonable.My number is not a certain number of votes (which is obviously a ridiculous way to go: you can't count votes before they are cast!),
Yet you deny it is elitist. Pathetic. When you will understand it is not about disallowing people that you think they have no chances?Even 15% means a candidate has virtually no chance (read: less than 1%) of a victory, and that candidate would just be cluttering up the stage.
I see no point in discussion with you if you are going just to make up things.I don't think that allowing random people with virtually no chance to win in the debates is a good idea, as I have a greater than zero but less than 1% chance to win as well. Since you can't prove that I will have less than 3 million write-in votes before the votes are cast and counted, you must admit me (and millions of other people) in by your logic.