Turquoise wrote:
Instead, we have several gerrymandered districts that keep certain people in power for long periods of time solely because of district lines.
Our system would work much better without the
el Senatorae for life setup we currently have.
Something to be said for experience and continuity, but anything over 12 to 18 years in the Senate is excessive.
These life-term Senators become representatives of D.C. interests, and little else.
Turquoise wrote:
The balance would most certainly shift. That's a good thing however, if you believe in one man = one vote.
Therein lies the difference between a Democracy and a Republic.
A true Democracy, you would have a system where the Senate is voted by population (as is the House). One person, one vote. The problem with this would be readily apparent if adopted today; Everywhere but New York-to-Washington D.C. belt, Chicago-Milwaukee-Detroit area, and Southern California would be
completely disenfranchised (With perhaps Floriduh and central Texas as the only swing vote areas). All a Federal candidate would have to do, is run in those key areas to secure a majority vote. The rest of the country would be ignorable, as far as a candidate would be concerned.
A representative Republic, you have a balance between true Democracy's
'Ein Volk, Ein Vote' (House) and a Republic's even representation by geographical distribution (Senate). In the Presidential elections, this is the same logic behind the Electoral College system.
So, yeah, a true Democracy would be great.. for people in Chicago, New York, D.C., Miami, and Austin.. Right up until the rest of the country quit the Union with cries of
'no taxation without representation'