Ns1
No Lifer
- Jun 17, 2001
- 55,420
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gravity has a pro-Clinton bias.
I think that's actually my biggest problem with Sanders - dude looks 0% like a president.
gravity has a pro-Clinton bias.
gravity has a pro-Clinton bias.
Iowa democrats need to release the popular vote count, so we know who the people really supported. If Hillary had won it, they would have released it by now.
He reminds me of a mad scientist.I think that's actually my biggest problem with Sanders - dude looks 0% like a president.
I think that's actually my biggest problem with Sanders - dude looks 0% like a president.
I think that's actually my biggest problem with Sanders - dude looks 0% like a president.
Oh that's different. A 1 in 64 chance. hmmmI read she won 6. but yeah 4 is possible..but still slim.
They should have split the delegates evenly. No random bullshit.
Rotating? Yes, good idea. Every state? Bad idea. It's important to start with smaller states so fresh faces have a chance to build support. If you start in a big state or region, then money rules all and the only candidates who have a chance are establishment favorites and billionaires. I don't want that, and I suspect you don't either.[ ... ] Hell, we should get rid of Iowa as the first primary state too while we're at it. Make it into a rotating primary schedule so every state gets a chance to be first.
caucuses are absolutely bizarre and terrible... said every Clinton '08 supporter. lolThey should have split the delegates evenly. No random bullshit.
Rotating? Yes, good idea. Every state? Bad idea. It's important to start with smaller states so fresh faces have a chance to build support. If you start in a big state or region, then money rules all and the only candidates who have a chance are establishment favorites and billionaires. I don't want that, and I suspect you don't either.
So what's your solution to the funding issue, or are you OK with limiting elections to establishment favorites and billionaires?I do want every state, actually. Small states already have innumerable electoral advantages over larger ones and their interests frequently diverge significantly from those of larger states. I don't think the argument for permanently codifying yet another small state electoral advantage into our presidential selection system is a good idea.
Or put more succinctly, I don't think that it's a good idea to base our electoral system on the price of media markets. Every state deserves an equal chance to have its priorities come first. Or hell, just have a national primary day.
So what's your solution to the funding issue, or are you OK with limiting elections to establishment favorites and billionaires?
according to https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...ry-clintons-6-for-6-coin-toss-victories-were/ the 6/6 coin toss is wrong.
Hillary did win 6, but there were also several coin tosses that went in Sanders' favor and the end results were closer to 50/50.
My point is that a candidate has to have deep pockets to run a campaign in a large state like California or New York, or a multi-state event like Super Tuesday. Without the bankroll, candidates are invisible in big venues. They will never even get started. The retail politics of smaller states gives good candidates an opportunity to make their case and become visible. This opens the doors to the money they need to be competitive on Super Tuesday.I don't think that the first state a primary is held in has such enormous influence that starting in a large state would mean only those backed by the establishment or billionaires would win. It does give that state greater influence, but that's the whole point. As we have it now the entire first month of the primary season where numerous candidates already drop out due to their poor showing takes place in states where the combined population is smaller than Pennsylvania.
Two points. There are plenty of other small states besides Iowa. You'll also note that Cruz one last night in spite of his stance against such subsidies. While corn subsidies are certainly an issue in Iowa, it's only one of many.So basically I just don't see how the advantages to better funded candidates are so great that they eclipse the problems with giving tiny states such an outsized role in selecting candidates. Why is it we have spent $90 billion or so on corn subsidies over the last 10 years but California has huge unfunded infrastructure needs? The Iowa caucuses certainly don't help. Considering the vast array of electoral advantages that small states enjoy for reasons that really don't make any sense in modern America anyway it's hard for me to accept an argument for furthering them.
My point is that a candidate has to have deep pockets to run a campaign in a large state like California or New York, or a multi-state event like Super Tuesday. Without the bankroll, candidates are invisible in big venues. They will never even get started. The retail politics of smaller states gives good candidates an opportunity to make their case and become visible. This opens the doors to the money they need to be competitive on Super Tuesday.
Two points. There are plenty of other small states besides Iowa. You'll also note that Cruz one last night in spite of his stance against such subsidies. While corn subsidies are certainly an issue in Iowa, it's only one of many.
If Hillary really won 6/6 coin tosses, that's 1/64 chance, God must be on her side this season.
Yeah that sounds like the best explanation :hmm:
I'm going to wait to see if this story about Hillary getting 6/6 coin flips is really even validated because it sounds like the kind of thing that could be born from rumor or exaggeration. If it really did happen I'd like to know more about what they did to ensure that a fair coin was used and a fair flip was performed.
Turns out the 6/6 thing was bullshit. There were more coin flips and the total outcome was fairly close to 50/50.
Turns out the 6/6 thing was bullshit. There were more coin flips and the total outcome was fairly close to 50/50.
Gravity is just a theory. Conservatives have doubts
This is Hillary Clinton: God will be where she damn well tells him to be.If Hillary really won 6/6 coin tosses, that's 1/64 chance, God must be on her side this season.
Isn't that kind of backward? Small states have limited media. Seems to me that a well-funded candidate could swamp the airwaves and thus crowd out the poorly funded candidates.Rotating? Yes, good idea. Every state? Bad idea. It's important to start with smaller states so fresh faces have a chance to build support. If you start in a big state or region, then money rules all and the only candidates who have a chance are establishment favorites and billionaires. I don't want that, and I suspect you don't either.