The great thing about the constitution is that it's principals were agreed to and ratified by all those involved. Even better is that to change those principals it requires a similar universal agreement and ratification.
And that agreement was based on voting as sovereign states i.e. already giving leverage to the smaller states. I’m annoyed how people seem to think the compromise was for some kind of ideal. Some states would have never confederated without big concessions to them on the issue of slavery, and the smaller states had leverage via how the convention was setup.
Again, the issue isn't small states preventing more populous states from enacting their agenda, the issue is a party that doesn't believe in the purpose of the institution itself and a leader who seems intent on corrupting the process.
Democrats would be wise to do what Republicans have done to Democrat party leaders and to demonize Republican leaders like Mitch McConnell. The difference, of course, is that their demonization of Mitch would be rooted in fact and reality.
The senate isn't broken, the people who were elected that lead it are.
But it is a huge problem because there's something fundamentally wrong about a possibility where Democrats can keep getting under 50 in the Senate, which doesn't even get into how laughable the filibuster is now with the polarization of the parties as a consequence of mass media and other developments in the modern era. it's not just the turtle. The others are just like him. This is the outcome because our insittutions are incredibly flawed.
Yeah, I said that up thread. At the end of the day, the constitution has some fundamental problems with elections, representation and checks and balance, but the people that benefit will never vote to change it.
I disagree. There are a number of things that arguably should have required amendments, yet they happened. It only takes the majority of the SC to agree it violates some part of the Constitution.
Don't you find it odd that the founding fathers were smart enough to provide a provision for the house that said as the population increases more seats should be had to represent them but that no such provision was made for the senate?
Why are you even asking this? Yes, they weren't infallible. They fucked up. You know what else was a colossal fuck up? The Articles of Confederation. The absurd ratios regarding the Senate are bringing up similar issues as were with the Articles of Confederation.
As has already been discussed, creating more states would be a good start. We should consider consolidating others as again, as a good example still to this day no one has explained to me a single, solitary advantage to the United States of having two Dakotas.
The easiest start is Puerto Rico and DC. i can't see the state thing happening when the majority in CA don't want it to happen. And there's nothing preventing the Republicans from doing the same if that's feasible.