Nov. 19th, 2016

conuly: (Default)
First, sign the petition and spam it around, would you? I know it's silly and futile, but it's also super-low-effort. Somewhere in the multiverse, hypocrisy doesn't pay.

Second, at the very least we've got people talking about it. Unfortunately, at least half of what people are saying is inane and ill-informed.

1. "You're just trying to change the way the electoral college works because you don't like the results!"

Well, yes, when it comes to the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact I suppose I am... but I was on the anti-electoral-college case for a while. It's got little to do with this particular issue.

However, if by "change the way it works" you mean these petitions - listen, if the electoral college was intended to be a rubber stamp, we wouldn't bother having electors. We'd just do the math, the same way CNN does the math today. This is literally the way it works. Just because we've effectively house ruled that it isn't doesn't mean we can't decide to play by the book. (And why are you so scared? You and I both agree this won't work, so what are you getting worked up about? I know what I'm getting worked up about, but how about you?)

1a. "The system works the way it is intended to work. If the electors voted independently, that would be awful!"

This is not the way the system was intended to work.

2. "But if we didn't do this weird thing, democracy would collapse."

Nobody else does this weird thing.

2a. "Well, because of our large country and states - I mean, do we want the five biggest cities choosing what the rest of the country does!?"

I've done the math. Even if the five largest cities in this nation voted in lockstep, there still aren't enough people to collectively decide the election.

3. "Something something something founders wanted to protect states' rights."

If your argument predates the Civil War, and revolves around states' rights, then a little history for you: that's a codeword for slavery.

Which is good, because otherwise it's just bizarre. Who today thinks of themselves as a citizen of a state instead of the USA? It's arbitrary lines on a map. What a strange way to divide up the populace! We might as well divide people into electoral districts based on job, or race, or level of education.

4. "Our Founding Fathers wisely wanted to prevent demagogues from taking power."

Okay, yeah, I've used that argument myself and pulled up the relevant quote from the Federalist Papers, but let's not kid ourselves here. Our Founding Fathers wanted to prevent the masses from voting in somebody who would make rules the elite didn't like. Now, I'm not going to say the rule they cared about was slavery, I'm sure there were many property rights they didn't want taken away from them, but... yeah.

5. "Well, we're not a democracy, we're a republic."

Technically true. That's not at all connected to the electoral college. That has to do with our legislative branch. We are a republic because we have Congress - not because our system for picking the president is unique in the world.

6. "Well, we can't just throw out something the Founding Fathers came up with!"

We already did when we started directly electing Senators.

I'm convinced. We don't need more STEM in America, we need more civics and history.
conuly: (Default)
Finally, a type of face that men recognize better than women

Peeling back the history of Soviet wallpaper

Ducklings 'maintain two separate memory banks of visual information'

The Dutch prison crisis: A shortage of prisoners

What our ancestors’ third eye reveals about the evolution of mammals to warm blood

Scientists modify plants, making them use sunlight better

The First — Every Day is Thanksgiving: The History of the TV Dinner

The story of Melanie Griffith's childhood pet lion

Labor of love: The super-secret outlaw doula in backwoods California

Study shows cardio protects against depression

Surgeon general report: 'Addiction is not a character flaw'

An Alarm Designer on How to Annoy People in the Most Effective Ways

Bursting the Facebook bubble: we asked voters on the left and right to swap feeds

Advocates Look To Obama For “Unprecedented” Action On Federal Prison Sentences

All Queens Must Die

It's Still About Class and Geography

A camp for young people touched by terror

Trial or deal? Some driven to plead guilty, later exonerated

Arab Spring Break

Disowned by family, women rescued from Indian brothels turn to counseling

Extreme Center Goes After Anti-Trump Protesters

With Trump Using Tower as Base, Fifth Avenue Grinds to a Halt

How Trump Took Hate Groups Mainstream (Article from October)

Trump understands what many miss: people don’t make decisions based on facts

Trump told by New York mayor that city is 'fearful' of him

As Trump talks wall, China builds bridges to Latin America

China’s Great Leap Backward

Obama warns against ‘a crude sort of nationalism’ taking root in the U.S.

Torture haunts Mexico despite laws meant to eliminate it

Toxic pollutants choke Iraqi children caught in Islamic State retreat

US-backed air campaign accused of war crimes in Yemen

Profile

conuly: (Default)
conuly

January 2026

S M T W T F S
     12 3
4 5 6 78 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 1617
18 1920 21222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 20th, 2026 04:04 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios