• finley
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      824 months ago

      and their votes count more than your city votes!

    • @niktemadur
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      454 months ago

      I can hear their goddamned chants…

      Every square yard counts!
      Every square yard counts!

      When it suits them. That is basically how it does work, to their benefit. If it benefitted Democrats, well then… “that’s entirely different, see?”, they’d be screaming to high heaven at the “unfair librul conspiracy to take over the government!”

      • @ccunning
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        324 months ago

        Every square yard counts!
        Every square yard counts!

        “Never fight uphill me boys!”

        • @[email protected]
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          154 months ago

          Trump comes up with the strangest lines, I swear.

          Despite the constant negative press covfefe

          It was a Perfect phone call

          We’re going to win bigly

        • OptionalOP
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          34 months ago

          But it was too late.

          Gettysburg. Wow.

    • OptionalOP
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      174 months ago

      Yep. Thanks slavery! A great idea that just keeps givin’

    • @Klear
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      174 months ago

      I hate that.

    • @Chev
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      24 months ago

      Wait, so the US Votes by area and not by head count?

  • @PunnyName
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    4 months ago

    This country was founded on the idea that land is power and land owners get to vote.

    We need to change that. Peacefully first. But if that doesn’t work…peaceful protesting only works for so long.

    • @Crowfiend
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      124 months ago

      ¡VIVA LA PROLETARIAT! DEATH TO THE RICH!

    • @[email protected]
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      124 months ago

      I don’t think it is relevant.

      The xkcd points out distribution and population.

      The second map highlights how much more democratic the us is than republican and that is it obviously a broken system that republican’s have a chance of winning

      • OptionalOP
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        54 months ago

        agreed - love xkcd, happy to see it anytime, but it’s very specifically out of context here.

        Population maps are what it’s about.

      • BigAssFan
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        24 months ago

        2nd map only shows full red or blue dots, whereas in reality each dot would be a pie-chart of red and blue.

  • @evidences
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    514 months ago

    I doubt anyone will disagree with me but “look at how red this map is” is the stupidest arguement.

    Last year after ana election my dad reposted a map on Facebook like this but for the single issue on our states ballot. The comment from the original poster was something like liberal cities decided this all counties need representation. Of course the counties that weren’t blue were mostly populated by cows.

    But like seriously this was a direct popular vote on a single issue you can’t get a more representative election than that one.

    • @[email protected]
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      324 months ago

      My favorite thing to do with these people is to ask them “okay, would it be alright if these issues were decided on a per-county basis then?”, if they say no they’ve outed themselves as just wanting to hold as much control over others as possible from a minority position, if they say yes ask again but with individual towns, if they say yes to that, then you narrow it down to individual people, then they tend to get mad when they realize what you’ve done

      • @aidan
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        24 months ago

        then you narrow it down to individual people, then they tend to get mad when they realize what you’ve done

        That’s anarchocapitalism…

    • @wolfpack86
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      124 months ago

      Yep. There are currently three heavy biases favoring the rural population. -senate (by design) -the house --not by design, but because the representation was capped at 435. It hasn’t grown with population and thus a citizen in Wyoming gets more representation than a citizen in California (or Texas for that matter) -the presidency by virtue of the above two being biased.

      Fix house apportionment, let the Senate be the safeguard, and the presidency will have a very slight protection by nature of the electors via what matches the Senate.

      This is all in line with the framing of the Constitution, but it gives up power to “the bad guys” (aka the actual majority)

  • acargitz
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    Why don’t the Blue states just enact social democratic policies and let the Red ones rot in their ancap dystopias?

    Americans seem to have forgotten about federalism. You don’t need the same laws governing all 340 million of you.

    The EU is a patchwork of rights for example. Poland doesn’t have marriage equality and only permits abortions in case of rape, incest, or danger to the mother. The Netherlands has marriage equality and abortions on demand up to 24 weeks. The union is not endangered by this.

    Hell, Canada does federalism better than you, with a relatively weak federal government that needs to be always consulting with the provinces. Provinces retain much of the income-tax revenue and get to experiment much more meaningfully with different policy mixes, under a multi-party system.

    • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod
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      124 months ago

      Why don’t the Blue states just enact social democratic policies and let the Red ones rot in their ancap dystopias?

      Because the red states have outsized influence over federal law, and they can outlaw the social democratic policies at a national level.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 months ago

      let the Red ones rot in their ancap dystopias?

      Because there will be a lot of people in those areas who are not happy living under an ancap dystopia. Those states may even try to trap them there like Texas wants to do.

      Imagine a couple moved to one of these ancap dystopias and have a kid. That kid turns out to be a big leftist and they hate not having rights.

      We can’t just forget about the other states and only care about some. At that point, you can consider the United States to have fallen.

      • acargitz
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        64 months ago

        So long as there is free movement of people and basic democracy, if people hate it they can leave it or change it.

        • @[email protected]
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          44 months ago

          That also supposes that everyone can afford to move to somewhere they would like to be. There’s a reason the right wants people to stay where they are regardless of political affiliation. Those states tend to be full of poor folks living where they can afford to live. Not everyone has the privilege of living in a place that treats them they way they’d like to be treated.

          • acargitz
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            24 months ago

            No, I said freedom of movement AND basic democracy. It assumes that people have enough democratic rights that they can organize to change the laws in their own community.

            It is a truism that oppression exists and that it affects exactly the people who can’t escape it. There are no shortcuts to freedom unfortunately. The American solution has been that some external authority, the federal government comes and resolves this. For the big things, slavery, apartheid, I get it. But for things below the threshold of crimes against humanity, it becomes trickier because then control of the Big Saviour starts being a critical battleground, it can turn into the Big Oppressor, and basically you might end up with the unworkable federalism you currently have.

    • مهما طال الليل
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      Why don’t the Blue states just enact social democratic policies and let the Red ones rot in their ancap dystopias?

      If we assume that the Democratic Party actually wants to do good and not just what their donors want. They still have to contend with a Senate that’s is biased towards the empty states, and even the House of Representatives is somewhat biased but not as bad.

      Now if the Blue States (or even Counties) form some kind of union to transcend the USA, things might begin to happen.

      The EU is a patchwork of rights for example

      The EU is a confederacy. It has a much weaker central government and much stronger states. The US could go back to a confederacy model.

      • acargitz
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        4 months ago

        What’s stopping California or Vermont or whatever from enacting state-level Universal Health Insurance programs or free university or whatever else?

        • @WoahWoah
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          Nothing other than cost and logistics. Massachusetts had “RomneyCare” before ObamaCare existed for the country as a whole.

          The fact that now state-level reforms and policies aren’t pursued is partially a symptom of the American people become national-authority simps.

          And it’s partially because Democrats and Republicans seem determined to make everyone follow their interpretation of the rules. Most of American politics at this point seems to be about “hurting the right people.”

          Lastly, most key wedge issues in the United States are often fundamentally moral questions that relate to constitutionality, making it impossible to allow some states to, for instance, hold slaves, allow child labor, allow abortion, allow religious fascism in public schools, allow racial discrimination, etc., without other states prevailing on the bedrock morality of the constitution.

          I.e., the United States does not, as a singular country, remotely agree on fundamental ethics that can form a foundation for a coherent nation that would then allow for more state-level experimentation. The are certainly “different” states though. Look at Vermont vs. New Hampshire for instance. They’re quite different despite being bordering states.

          • acargitz
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            Yes, I agree. That’s why I wrote that Americans have forgotten how to do federalism. Like, I get that states rights used to mean fucking slavery and you needed a strong central government to keep the southern racists from lynching people, but how else are you going to manage such a vast space and remain a democracy in the 21st century?

            The moral issues you guys are culture warring over are nowhere near as grave as slavery or segregation now.

            Not only that, but you have also concentrated the arbitration of these cosmic moral wedge issues on like what 10 people? President, SCOTUS, and whatever Manchin figure is the Senate kingmaker of the year. No wonder it’s breaking at the seams.

            • @WoahWoah
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              54 months ago

              Yeah, that’s why I mentioned that the United States has basically become national authority simps. “Voting” these days for most people is synonymous with presidential elections.

              That being said, for many people, issues like abortion, trans and gay segregation/discrimination, legal slavery of prisoners, mass and school shootings, and the rates of violence and murder against: Indigenous, black, etc men and women are fairly serious and important issues that are, if not equal, relatively close in terms of moral outrage to lynching and slavery. I can understand that you don’t see it that way though.

              • acargitz
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                34 months ago

                Don’t get me wrong, I am passionate about civil and economic rights in Quebec. But I accept that certain rules change at the Vermont border. The question even the most ardent internationalist must ask is at what threshold do things in another jurisdiction become so intolerable that they would need to get personally involved and intervene in another People’s business. In international law, which we can take as the base rate, that threshold is pretty high, at crimes against humanity-ish. From there it goes down. How far down? Depends on the balance different communities are willing to strike. Inter-community intervention also has its own catastrophic consequences. There is no right answer of course but I strongly suspect the contemporary American one is not it.

                • @WoahWoah
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                  24 months ago

                  Yeah, well put. I generally agree.

                • @AA5B
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                  14 months ago

                  You must also recognize you’re not getting an unbiased source here online. What are the true differences? I suspect us Americans are more likely than most to complain about politics, to “air our dirty laundry”. I’m not really disagreeing with your points but the differences in real life might be smaller than you’d think from some of these discussions

        • @AA5B
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          Massachusetts has that, or as far as we can. You’ll find a range of policies with each state being different but “blue” states leaning in one direction and “red” states leaning in another. There are several states with variations in at least some free college, and some states with much better health insurance coverage

          We have “universal” coverage, building on Romneycare, but are still subject to the same framework as everyone else. We still need to honor everyone else’s insurance providers, the whole patchwork of profit takers and inefficiencies. By ourselves we can only do the same thing better, but we can’t change the paradigm

          It’s been a long time coming but tuition is finally free at state universities and colleges. It was even retroactive for the school year: in April 29, I got a refund of all the tuition i had paid for my kid for last school year

        • مهما طال الليل
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          04 months ago

          The Commerce Clause is one often cited by conservatives. I am not a lawyer but if they can abuse it you bet they will even if that’s not what it was meant for.

          • @[email protected]
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            34 months ago

            The commerce clause doesn’t apply to in-state systems unless they interact with a foreign nation, native tribe, or another state.

            What kind of abuse is even possible here?

            • مهما طال الليل
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              I saw it brought up against states setting their own emission standards. I don’t agree with it but it is something I have seen them argue.

              • @[email protected]
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                14 months ago

                Fair enough - but, emissions can be argued (with evidence) to be an interstate issue, particularly with large cities being contributors.

      • @[email protected]
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        24 months ago

        Honestly, I think shifting the fed to a more Confederate model would be a good idea. A large number of problems we’re running into is the attempt to control the whole nation over local interests. It might be possible to diffuse a large number of contentious points just on that alone.

    • @bonus_crab
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      44 months ago

      That was the ideal, but every ounce of freedom given to the south has been used to torment the vulnerable, so they kept losing supreme court cases and having amendments added to the constition that give the federal govt. more power because its needed their state governments from being evil.

      See slavery, the black codes, jim crow laws, womens rights, religious freedom, environmental protectionism, coal mining in appalaicha, etc.

      You still cant hold office in 7 states in the south if youre an athiest btw.

    • @AA5B
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      The traditional map is more reflective of electoral power. This one is by population which would be critical in a republic, but traditional map where each count is colored by their majority shows how being the majority in lightly populated areas gives outsized power.

      Cities tend to be Blue, but cities don’t get a unified vote, plus are subject to state laws. Look at Houston: they don’t have a chance

      But yes, we do federalism. Speaking for Massachusetts:

      • as close to universal healthcare as you can get in the us
      • healthcare “sanctuary” state
      • consistently the best or near the best education system
      • free tuition at state universities
      • minimum wage over $15, among the highest
      • strong emphasis on transit, walkable cities
      • strong anti pollution and anti climate change laws
      • strong wetlands and coastal protection
      • among the first states to be entirely rid of coal
      • immigrant protections
      • first state to legalize gay marriage
      • among the first to legalize marijuana
      • by some reviews, highest quality of life in the US

      But we’re affected by everyone else:

      • not allowed to make air pollution rules. All we can say is we agree with California
      • we had forced EPA to regulate Midwest polluters where downwind pollution affected us. Worked for a few decades but recent Supreme Court ruling says EPA can’t regulate interstate pollution, wtf
      • strong gun control laws, partly invalidated by recent Supreme Court. I know I’m not surrounded by “good guys” with concealed weapons ready to blast away when they get uncomfortable

      When I read about some places attempts to prevent voting, I am so happy none of it is relevant. My state has good outreach to make it easy to register, easy to vote in whatever manner you choose, and has sufficiently funded voting center ps that everyone has a convenient one with little to no waiting. I can walk to mine. When there’s been a line, it’s short and in air conditioning. There’s always a school fundraiser bake sale if I want a treat

      So yes, believe me, we look down on all those dystopias between free cities as we fly over. They may have been misled and manipulated but they chose their poison

  • @[email protected]
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    Good luck trying to get an American conservative to understand what the second map represents. I means shit, they refuse to grasp the concept of “per capita” because they know it makes them look bad.

    • OptionalOP
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      174 months ago

      gasp Are you suggesting, good sir, that republiQans may in fact not be arguing a particular point in good faith???

      NO! I cannot believe it.

  • @njm1314
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    434 months ago

    That huge red circles Phoenix right?

  • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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    424 months ago

    Hey, that’s not fair. Some of that is also sagebrush and pine trees. And some of it is cool rocks.

    • OptionalOP
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      144 months ago

      I’ll allow it.

    • @Phegan
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      154 months ago

      Abolish the senate.

      • @BradleyUffner
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        54 months ago

        I’m not sure what you’re asking. The Senate isn’t based on land. Texas gets just as many votes in the Senate as Rohde Island.

      • lemmyvore
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        24 months ago

        Normally, in a democracy, you have two chambers for the legislature so that one of them is filled by popular vote from all over the country and the other by representatives allocated for administrative divisions.

        In the US both chambers are allocated for predefined divisions, just on different scales (state vs slice of population), so the principle of the popular vote is not represented.

        It does serve (in theory) to make up for a state that had lower population, but since the slices are subject to manipulation it’s debatable.

    • @aidan
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      14 months ago

      Why does land determine who tells me what to do then?

      • Maple Engineer
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        14 months ago

        Because the US electoral system is fundamentally broken?

        • @aidan
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          14 months ago

          What? It’s a worldwide thing, not just the US

          • Maple Engineer
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            14 months ago

            Yes, to some extent it happens everywhere but the US has reduced the phenominon to its grotesque final form.

            • @aidan
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              14 months ago

              No, it happens to the same extent in basically anywhere that’s populated and can afford to enforce it

  • @[email protected]
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    244 months ago

    there’s no lying like lying with maps

    (for those ggr nerds, yes, “the map was a lie”)

    • @flonker
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      124 months ago

      Especially Google maps, they persuaded my friend to turn right and now he thinks corporations are people.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 months ago

        never considered online service maps much as political maps, but of course they are. What gets mapped as POI tells people what they are to find interesting and what not vice versa.

  • @ObsidianZed
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    204 months ago

    Is the top image a map someone tried to push as the ratio of red vs blue counties?

    • @Crowfiend
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      114 months ago

      As others have said, yes it is. Unfortunately it’s also a strong representation of how the voting process operates in the US. At the local level (towns and cities), individual votes matter. However, for something like the presidential election (for example), then the votes are averaged by county and state.

      So what happens is everyone from a county votes, and if that county is more of one side than the other, that entire county is “voting x/y”. Then the counties across the state are compared, and that state is declared as “voting” for either side. Then nationally, each state is counted as either/or, so even if the more populated cities vote one way, if enough of the rural population votes the other way, the rural side wins, and the urban side loses.

      It’s almost as if the system urgently needs reform. Too bad the powers in charge of that were elected specifically because of it.

    • @[email protected]
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      What’s your point, though? I’m not sure if you’re pointing out that this is basically a population density map in order to argue something in particular? Because it seems like OP’s entire point was that while the majority of Americans are not conservative, people disguise this fact by NOT using population density maps to demonstrate political spreads.

      So, yeah, people live in cities. And most Americans swing left. Glad we can both read the map and agree on its message 👍

        • OptionalOP
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          74 months ago

          Probably why when the slaver’s college was being debated the “let’s not concentrate political power in a few northeastern cities” argument held more sway.

          • @[email protected]
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            104 months ago

            I mean if by very recent you mean around the 60’s sure. But that’s still for like 20% of this country’s existence. Early in the country’s history New York/Boston/Philadelphia also had a lot of power in deciding who became president.

      • @Crowfiend
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        4 months ago

        I’m ancient times, people outside city walls weren’t even allowed to vote. Add in the fact that humanity is tribal in nature, and your statement holds even less true.

        You think the peasants outside city walls were even allowed to vote on anything? They were literally outsiders that knew little to nothing about the inner (more populated) parts of cities.

        A city’s overall opinion is literally more important than rural mud slinging opinion, if for no other reason than because more people live there, and are affected by policy.

        Edit: sorry for being mean

        • blaue_Fledermaus
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          24 months ago

          Sorry, I wasn’t trying to create polemic. I’m well aware that for most of history democratic voting wasn’t a thing.

          Just wanted to add a bit of context, yes, by population city opinion is more important NOW, but until very recently, considering strictly population, it was not, and the current political tensions are in part caused by this change.

          I wish respectful conversation, sorry if I seemed rude.

          • @Crowfiend
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            Sorry if I seemed rude. Ignoring life problems, I’m not great at talking to people or voicing my thoughts, I just get really angry over things since a car wreck a couple years ago. Like all my feelings towards anything at all have been amplified. I do genuinely hope you have a good rest of your day.

            I do still feel that your statement on the matter excludes the fact that, since the dawn of history, the town/city has been infinitely more relevant to voting matters than rural could ever be. As I said, the people living outside the city walls were irrelevant to practical sociopolitical matters.

            • blaue_Fledermaus
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              24 months ago

              Certainly, but in the context of democracies, the rural people were made very relevant, being the majority, but now are being pushed back into being irrelevant, and are angry about it.

              I too wish you a good rest of the day, and a wonderful weekend, and may you come across people that stand with you so you can feel better.