It is just a big place with good parking that is empty on Tuesday nights...I voted! My polling place was in a Church of the Nazarene. Take that, supposed separation of church and state! Ha!
It is just a big place with good parking that is empty on Tuesday nights...I voted! My polling place was in a Church of the Nazarene. Take that, supposed separation of church and state! Ha!
Still, you'd think somebody might have a problem with lining up to vote while surrounded by protestant christian iconography.It is just a big place with good parking that is empty on Tuesday nights...
You'd probably be interested in this report:Still, you'd think somebody might have a problem with lining up to vote while surrounded by protestant christian iconography.
Then again, it is rural Texas.
Also why I could vote independent and not have to think strategically about how my vote would matter.He is in a position of voting privilege by living in a state guaranteed to choose the party he prefers.
Thus he can sit out the vote as a protest while still receiving the benefit - the state's electors go for the person he prefers.
Voting for anyone other than him is voting against him. Being in a blue state meant I could vote against him any way that I preferred.I still voted hillary despite being in a state where it doesn't matter so I can say that I at least voted against him.
Technically yes, but if you vote for his strongest opponent your vote may actually be more effective at denying him your electors.Voting for anyone other than him is voting against him. Being in a blue state meant I could vote against him any way that I preferred.
True in a battleground state, but strategically voting doesn't do much in a state that is overwhelmingly for the strongest opponent already. That is why Hillary can win the popular vote but lose the election, after all. It also why I framed it as a privilege.Technically yes, but if you vote for his strongest opponent your vote may actually be more effective at denying him your electors.
But that's a question of vote efficiency.
I'm sure that's what people in Wisconsin thought.True in a battleground state, but strategically voting doesn't do much in a state that is overwhelmingly for the strongest opponent already. That is why Hillary can win the popular vote but lose the election, after all. It also why I framed it as a privilege.
Sorry, but you did. When you cast a vote for a candidate that's giving them your support.I cast my vote for Clinton, but didn't vote FOR her.
I suppose.
You know, after I woke up the next morning I watched that Futurama episode where they all forget to vote. I think Richard Nixon's head in a jar would have won against either candidate.
I haven't looked, but is there a proportionally higher number of the party votes there? or in other non battle ground states? there is a testable hypothesis in three somewhere.I'm sure that's what people in Wisconsin thought.
Yeah, 35 people did put Plom McFartle as their #1 in the example.Sounds nice, though I still would've voted Hillary number 1 this year.
That sounds like a good system, but they probably shouldn't let dingos vote.What we need. Well, one of the things we need.
Because humans always make good decisions at election time.That sounds like a good system, but they probably shouldn't let dingos vote.
The only way your vote would go to any of the candidates you don't want would be if all of the candidates you do want lost. So at that point you're just ranking them based on which is less worse, since one of those is going to win.All good except for the "you have to number all the boxes" part.
If my vote doesn't go to the few people I'm interested in, then I want it to be thrown away at that point, not be given to some candidates I don't like at all.
Given that you can't not vote in Australia I can see why they'd force this, but in the US they'd have to allow a partial ballot with unfolded boxes.
You're ranking the candidates in order of your preference. That includes the candidate you would least prefer. I think this isn't a particularly bitter pill to swallow when compared with the benefits.All good except for the "you have to number all the boxes" part.
If my vote doesn't go to the few people I'm interested in, then I want it to be thrown away at that point, not be given to some candidates I don't like at all.
Given that you can't not vote in Australia I can see why they'd force this, but in the US they'd have to allow a partial ballot with unfolded boxes.
I think this isn't a particularly bitter pill to swallow when compared with the benefits.
I don't know; seems like a dud. After meeting Obama, Trump seems to be backtracking on campaign promises, and it's still two months until he even takes the job. Sounds like he's turning into a politician to me.He got his grenade. He better remember that shrapnel doesn't care who or what it hits.
His cabinet list is like a list of the most cruel, shitty people in the history of modern politics.I don't know; seems like a dud. After meeting Obama, Trump seems to be backtracking on campaign promises, and it's still two months until he even takes the job. Sounds like he's turning into a politician to me.