FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6411|'Murka

Pierre wrote:

Bollocks. Articles like in this thread clearly indicate that the Government is not capable - or not willing - to guarantee the absolute right of every single citizen to be able to vote.  It is the duty of the Government - be it local, state or federal - to guarantee that every citizen is able to register himself in a way that no one disputes his registration. Clearly, that's not the case.

Furthermore, it is the duty of the Government - be it local, state or federal, although I'd prefer federal - to guarantee that all votes are casted the same way and in an indisputable way, so that recounts are not necessary. Remember Florida 2000? Tell me why both candidates have thousands lawyers standing by at election day?
You are missing a basic component/philosophy of American government: The States have the bulk of the power, not the federal government. In fact, the Constitution is very unambiguous about that. The only powers the Federal government has are those expressly given it in the Constitution and its Amendments. All others belong to the States. Ergo, the States have the leeway to run elections how they choose. And they do just that. It only gets elevated beyond the State when it gets contested by someone.

The bottomline is that everyone who chooses to exercise their right to vote must follow defined rules to do so. They are neither complicated nor difficult to follow. As such, every citizen who is eligible to vote can register themselves and vote. It's quite simple.

In some instances, the methods for registering and verifying (or not verifying, as the case may be) are flawed. But it is up to the individual states to address those issues internally--not for the Feds to step in and mandate it. Federal elections occur far less often than state and local elections/referenda.

You'll never get away from a need for recounts, so long as you have close elections. It's called double-checking, and I have no problems with it.

BTW, are you planning on voting in an American election any time soon? No? Kthen.

Pierre wrote:

As long as the US don't follow these rules, they're at the same level as Zimbabwe.
Hyperbole ftl.

Pierre wrote:

FEOS wrote:

And what's wrong with states apportioning their electoral votes according to the popular vote in each district?
Nothing's wrong there, unless one would like to change the rules to steal an election.
One can't change the rules after the votes have been cast (or even for a period before voting commences). Hence one can't "steal an election". What the hell are you on about here?
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Pierre
I hunt criminals down for a living
+68|6676|Belgium

imortal wrote:

You see, the problem with your premise is that you assume it is the duty of the Federal government to assume that.  In fact, it is laid out in our Constitution that it is the clearly the pervue of the individual States.

Other than that, I agree that there should be a concrete way for a person to easily register to vote while checking to make sure that no one is registered twice and that the person registering is eligible (i.e. alive, for example).  I do not think either party is too intersted in cleaning the system up if they can twist it to their own benifit.  They ARE politicians, after all.
Fair enough. But don't you agree with the fact that having different rules on the level of the individual states means that not all votes are accounted for in the same way?
Pierre
I hunt criminals down for a living
+68|6676|Belgium

FEOS wrote:

You are missing a basic component/philosophy of American government: The States have the bulk of the power, not the federal government. In fact, the Constitution is very unambiguous about that. The only powers the Federal government has are those expressly given it in the Constitution and its Amendments. All others belong to the States. Ergo, the States have the leeway to run elections how they choose. And they do just that. It only gets elevated beyond the State when it gets contested by someone.

The bottomline is that everyone who chooses to exercise their right to vote must follow defined rules to do so. They are neither complicated nor difficult to follow. As such, every citizen who is eligible to vote can register themselves and vote. It's quite simple.

In some instances, the methods for registering and verifying (or not verifying, as the case may be) are flawed. But it is up to the individual states to address those issues internally--not for the Feds to step in and mandate it. Federal elections occur far less often than state and local elections/referenda.

You'll never get away from a need for recounts, so long as you have close elections. It's called double-checking, and I have no problems with it.
Fair enough. But my motion stands, it doesn't matter who is in charge of the voting system, if you can't make it flawless, then change it. Even if you only have a few federal elections.

FEOS wrote:

BTW, are you planning on voting in an American election any time soon? No? Kthen.
Seeing what a mess you people made of the last 2 electons, I'd like to. And I'm not only talking about electing GWB.

FEOS wrote:

Pierre wrote:

As long as the US don't follow these rules, they're at the same level as Zimbabwe.
Hyperbole ftl.
It's the closest to an F15 I can get

FEOS wrote:

Pierre wrote:

FEOS wrote:

And what's wrong with states apportioning their electoral votes according to the popular vote in each district?
Nothing's wrong there, unless one would like to change the rules to steal an election.
One can't change the rules after the votes have been cast (or even for a period before voting commences). Hence one can't "steal an election". What the hell are you on about here?
See my post above: Paul Singer

Paul Singer made news in September when he admitted to providing all of the funds ($175,000) to put a referendum on the California ballot to divide the state's 55 Electors according to Congressional Districts, which would give the GOP 20 Electors that would otherwise go to the Democrat - roughly the size of Ohio or Pennsylvania. When Singer's role was exposed, the staff all quit and the effort went on hold - presumably until Singer finds a less-traceable way to launder his money.
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6411|'Murka

Pierre wrote:

Fair enough. But my motion stands, it doesn't matter who is in charge of the voting system, if you can't make it flawless, then change it. Even if you only have a few federal elections.
So European elections are "flawless"? C'mon now...

FEOS wrote:

FEOS wrote:

BTW, are you planning on voting in an American election any time soon? No? Kthen.
Seeing what a mess you people made of the last 2 electons, I'd like to. And I'm not only talking about electing GWB.
And I'd like a shiny new motorcycle...but it ain't happening.

Pierre wrote:

FEOS wrote:

Pierre wrote:

As long as the US don't follow these rules, they're at the same level as Zimbabwe.
Hyperbole ftl.
It's the closest to an F15 I can get
I'm sure some of your "flawless" Euro brethren have an old MiG they can sell you. One time good deal for you, GI.

Pierre wrote:

FEOS wrote:

Pierre wrote:


Nothing's wrong there, unless one would like to change the rules to steal an election.
One can't change the rules after the votes have been cast (or even for a period before voting commences). Hence one can't "steal an election". What the hell are you on about here?
See my post above: Paul Singer

Paul Singer made news in September when he admitted to providing all of the funds ($175,000) to put a referendum on the California ballot to divide the state's 55 Electors according to Congressional Districts, which would give the GOP 20 Electors that would otherwise go to the Democrat - roughly the size of Ohio or Pennsylvania. When Singer's role was exposed, the staff all quit and the effort went on hold - presumably until Singer finds a less-traceable way to launder his money.
And again...that wouldn't affect the Nov Presidential election in any way, shape, or form. If it passed (which isn't a bad idea, btw), it wouldn't take effect until the NEXT Presidential election. So no "stealing" of any election there.

You still haven't answered the question of what is wrong with universal proportional distribution of electoral votes.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
Pierre
I hunt criminals down for a living
+68|6676|Belgium

FEOS wrote:

Pierre wrote:

Fair enough. But my motion stands, it doesn't matter who is in charge of the voting system, if you can't make it flawless, then change it. Even if you only have a few federal elections.
So European elections are "flawless"? C'mon now...
You do know Europe is not a country, don't you? Please tell me you do . . .

FEOS wrote:

And again...that wouldn't affect the Nov Presidential election in any way, shape, or form. If it passed (which isn't a bad idea, btw), it wouldn't take effect until the NEXT Presidential election. So no "stealing" of any election there.

You still haven't answered the question of what is wrong with universal proportional distribution of electoral votes.
I didn't say this will affect the coming election, I said it could have, if passed. I used it as an example of the need for a universal federal voting system in the US: one man = one vote, and is accounted for the same way.
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6411|'Murka

Pierre wrote:

You do know Europe is not a country, don't you? Please tell me you do . . .
Now you're just being pedantic.

And way to avoid the question.

Pierre wrote:

I didn't say this will affect the coming election, I said it could have, if passed. I used it as an example of the need for a universal federal voting system in the US: one man = one vote, and is accounted for the same way.
It could have affected the election, but it wouldn't have resulted in "stealing" it, now would it? Stealing means something was done illegally. If the law were passed, the electoral vote distribution would have been in accordance with the law, just as it is in two other states, btw.

The (oh so objective ) blogger carefully avoids those troublesome facts, though.

One person DOES equal one vote in this country. It is accounted for in exactly that way. If your real problem is with the electoral college, then say so. That is a different debate.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
imortal
Member
+240|6665|Austin, TX

Pierre wrote:

You do know Europe is not a country, don't you? Please tell me you do . . .
...yet.  Give it a couple hundred years.  After all, the US was originally a grouping of independant states with a shared currency and a 'federal' (as in 'federation' or 'confederation') government to oversee relations between those states.  Kind of like the EU is now...
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6405|North Carolina

FEOS wrote:

Got anything to back up your Florida voter fraud claims, there Turq?

Or about the "numerous cases" of misspellings of Obama's name?

And if you do, do you have anything that shows malice of forethought behind either?
Katherine Harris's involvement is all the needed proof right there.  Or perhaps the fact that Bush's brother was the governor of that state.

An example of the misspellings...  http://timesunion.com/AspStories/story. … yID=728326

Here are other things to worry about:

http://www.click2houston.com/investigat … etail.html

http://wvgazette.com/News/200810170676
Pierre
I hunt criminals down for a living
+68|6676|Belgium

FEOS wrote:

Pierre wrote:

You do know Europe is not a country, don't you? Please tell me you do . . .
Now you're just being pedantic.
Nothing pedantic about it. You would be surprised how many times people on this forum act like they are convinced that Europe is one country, just like the US. But Europe isn't, it's not a federation of countries, we don't elect the members of the EU Commission, we only elect the local members of the EU parliament, and I believe it's coming up in 2009 (we could do a thread about it).

FEOS wrote:

And way to avoid the question.
Not at all...

Pierre wrote:

Fair enough. But my motion stands, it doesn't matter who is in charge of the voting system, if you can't make it flawless, then change it. Even if you only have a few federal elections.

In his reply FEOS wrote:

So European elections are "flawless"? C'mon now...
We were talking US elections, not European elections.

FEOS wrote:

Pierre wrote:

I didn't say this will affect the coming election, I said it could have, if passed. I used it as an example of the need for a universal federal voting system in the US: one man = one vote, and is accounted for the same way.
It could have affected the election, but it wouldn't have resulted in "stealing" it, now would it? Stealing means something was done illegally. If the law were passed, the electoral vote distribution would have been in accordance with the law, just as it is in two other states, btw.

The (oh so objective ) blogger carefully avoids those troublesome facts, though.

One person DOES equal one vote in this country. It is accounted for in exactly that way. If your real problem is with the electoral college, then say so. That is a different debate.
I don't have a problem with the way votes are accounted for, proportional or any other way, that's up to the people of the US, by which I mean its lawmakers, to decide. That's the way the Constitution works. So if the Constitution declared that all states can individually decide how the votes of their citizens are accounted for, it's fine by me.

What I'm saying is that this means that rules in one state may differ from rules in another state, which means that the way votes are accounted for are not the same in very state. Which means that all people / votes are not equal.

Last edited by Pierre (2008-11-04 02:51:15)

Pierre
I hunt criminals down for a living
+68|6676|Belgium

imortal wrote:

Pierre wrote:

You do know Europe is not a country, don't you? Please tell me you do . . .
...yet.  Give it a couple hundred years.  After all, the US was originally a grouping of independant states with a shared currency and a 'federal' (as in 'federation' or 'confederation') government to oversee relations between those states.  Kind of like the EU is now...
I know, but I won't be around when that happens .

And I don't know what will happen: while 85 % of our local legislation comes from EU regulations, the current economical and financial crisis has shown that the EU as institution is not equipped to handle such global crisis, since all measures had to be taken by the member states themselves.

The way I see it this is a turning point, and we can go either way: more power to the European institutions, or loosen up the relations between the members. I assume the first, knowing that people in power want more power.
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6411|'Murka

Pierre wrote:

FEOS wrote:

Pierre wrote:

You do know Europe is not a country, don't you? Please tell me you do . . .
Now you're just being pedantic.
Nothing pedantic about it. You would be surprised how many times people on this forum act like they are convinced that Europe is one country, just like the US. But Europe isn't, it's not a federation of countries, we don't elect the members of the EU Commission, we only elect the local members of the EU parliament, and I believe it's coming up in 2009 (we could do a thread about it).
Well I'm not one of them and to say that instead of addressing the question was pedantic.

Pierre wrote:

FEOS wrote:

And way to avoid the question.
Not at all...

Pierre wrote:

Fair enough. But my motion stands, it doesn't matter who is in charge of the voting system, if you can't make it flawless, then change it. Even if you only have a few federal elections.

In his reply FEOS wrote:

So European elections are "flawless"? C'mon now...
We were talking US elections, not European elections.
And I asked about elections in Europe, since that's where you're from (realizing you're from an individual country, of course). You dodged the question by making a remark about Europe not being a single country instead of answering the question that was posed. And you still dodge it.

Pierre wrote:

FEOS wrote:

Pierre wrote:

I didn't say this will affect the coming election, I said it could have, if passed. I used it as an example of the need for a universal federal voting system in the US: one man = one vote, and is accounted for the same way.
It could have affected the election, but it wouldn't have resulted in "stealing" it, now would it? Stealing means something was done illegally. If the law were passed, the electoral vote distribution would have been in accordance with the law, just as it is in two other states, btw.

The (oh so objective ) blogger carefully avoids those troublesome facts, though.

One person DOES equal one vote in this country. It is accounted for in exactly that way. If your real problem is with the electoral college, then say so. That is a different debate.
I don't have a problem with the way votes are accounted for, proportional or any other way, that's up to the people of the US, by which I mean its lawmakers, to decide. That's the way the Constitution works. So if the Constitution declared that all states can individually decide how the votes of their citizens are accounted for, it's fine by me.
But that's what the Constitution says: The power to regulate election processes within the states belongs exclusively to the states. So I guess it's fine by you, then.

Pierre wrote:

What I'm saying is that this means that rules in one state may differ from rules in another state, which means that the way votes are accounted for are not the same in very state. Which means that all people / votes are not equal.
Yes, they are. There is a national election commission that ensures that all people/votes are treated equally. The accounting of individual votes is no different in each state than anywhere else: they are counted and the results compiled by Congressional district. The only difference is whether the electoral votes are proportionately distributed or "all in" for the overall winner in the state.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular

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