Re: Real Electoral reform
This is certainly feasible, but of course you get the other side of the problem: who exactly is 'your' representative? How would this representative know anything about your specific local situation? Why would any given representative spend time with one person as opposed to another - especially if the 5% of voters is literally scattered across the entire United States?
Let's not forget that Europe is far more dense, as well as the population stable, than the United States.
While the dynamic is true, how much of this is due to the influence of money? The national committees as well as the specific spending on candidates, IMO, is more of what skews results than any generalized Republican/Democrat split.
Every single item above can be equally ascribed to Asian Communist, Middle Eastern oligarchies, Central and South American democracies, and so on and so forth.
Even within the US itself - a mere 2 generations ago we had the Pecora commission, formation of Social Security, and so forth.
The US has had, for that matter, a 2 party system for literally centuries. Why have these problems only arisen now if the structural effects are so bad?
I'm not saying a change is without merit.
I'm merely noting that it is difficult to ascribe the present US situation to some long standing flaw in the system which can be fixed with a structural change, when neither the structural change can be conclusively shown to be better nor is it clear why the US having such problems due to said structural issues just now.
Originally posted by Polish Silver
Let's not forget that Europe is far more dense, as well as the population stable, than the United States.
Originally posted by Polish Silver
Originally posted by Polish Silver
Even within the US itself - a mere 2 generations ago we had the Pecora commission, formation of Social Security, and so forth.
The US has had, for that matter, a 2 party system for literally centuries. Why have these problems only arisen now if the structural effects are so bad?
I'm not saying a change is without merit.
I'm merely noting that it is difficult to ascribe the present US situation to some long standing flaw in the system which can be fixed with a structural change, when neither the structural change can be conclusively shown to be better nor is it clear why the US having such problems due to said structural issues just now.
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