Can be summed up in the acceptance speech of Republican Sen. Saxby Chambliss after officially winning the Georgia Senate seat.
12/3/2008 9:12:27 AM
12/3/2008 9:43:34 AM
I'm glad Chambliss's victory will prevent an unstoppable majority of democrats.But yeah, I get your point. The 2 majority parties are really just the result of "splitting" the issues in half as best the RNC and DNC can. Whether it's intentional or not, the platforms of the parties evolve over time as society changes, in order to maintain this "split" as close to 50/50 as possible. And accordingly, the parties must change their image and/or motto to reflect their newly dealt hand. The D's and R's aren't really parties like other parties...they are shape-shifting halves of a single "bipartisan" agenda. Centrists are often the worst of all. They create the illusion of checks and balances on the over-polarization of the 2 majority parties, when in fact they are just a nonsensical mix of the two. They act like bipartisanship is somehow as good as non-partisanship.
12/3/2008 9:53:37 AM
Another stream-of-consciousness rant by HUR?Shocking.Get a livejournal page or something.
12/3/2008 11:37:48 AM
It would be nice if the 41st Senator standing up against a Democratic juggernaut wasn't such a jackass.Just saying, is all.
12/3/2008 11:38:35 AM
He's not doing any good for the stereotype of people from Georgia.
12/3/2008 11:42:20 AM
^Yeah he is. If that quote is any indicator, he actually speaks coherently with some respect for grammar. Also he didn't say anything racist, which is another credit to Georgia.(This coming from someone who was born in the state... and is glad to have left the total shithole behind)
12/3/2008 11:47:22 AM
i was almost hoping that he would lose so that the dems would have a supermajorityim a fan of just letting this ship sink
12/3/2008 1:04:22 PM
12/3/2008 1:25:29 PM
Chambliss is a disgusting sonofabitch.this is the guy -- who never served in the military -- who attacked the patriotism of Senator Max Cleland, Vietnam vet, war hero, and triple amputee.i'd risk a dem supermajority to get that foul bastard out.
12/3/2008 1:59:24 PM
the problem with the two party system is that the D's and R's get in the way of good debate and further complicates issues.When the founders set up this nation the idea was simple.....every region of the US should send someone to represent them in a congress. Taxation with representation if you will. Local individuals! Not career politicians who move around if they dont get elected in one area. A farming community would send a farmer, a metropolitan like NY should send a metro. Once they serve their country, they should go back to where they came from. If not, they lose touch with the people and area they came from.This NEVER happens today, and the federal government has absolutely lost touch with most of the country as a result. Career politicians and party hacks have ruined the country.
12/3/2008 2:26:25 PM
12/3/2008 4:08:09 PM
12/3/2008 4:14:30 PM
Yeah I think just about everyone agrees that the two party system isnt that greatbut what can you do about it when together they control it all.
12/3/2008 4:15:16 PM
12/3/2008 5:42:46 PM
12/3/2008 6:53:57 PM
^Yes.. I'm a big fan of Instant Run-Off voting. Let's get some new blood into the system. It would be refreshing to see a new president bring in a cabinet that isn't just the same people from a previous administration. ( at both Bush & Obama)
12/3/2008 7:23:24 PM
Eventually everything coalesces behind two factions in any legislative system: the majority and the minority. If there's a 3rd party, they'll never set the agenda, but they can at least pressure the party they stand closest to. If you want the makeup of the legislative body and its inevitable coalitions to something that better depicts the makeup of the political beliefs of the nation, you want proportional representation. People don't vote for parties that aren't the Dems or GOP here not because they really love those parties 100%, but because they know that they'll be throwing their vote away. Under proportional representation, you vote for your party (who lists nominees for their seats won) and get the number of seats for your party based on percentages, so if you get 5% of the vote, you'll at least get someone likely representing that 5%.Of course, countries with that system also tend to publicly fund elections, which makes it less about the advertising, at least.
12/4/2008 12:12:05 AM
12/4/2008 3:01:35 AM
^Sorry to be out of the loop but... what the fuck ARE they doing?
12/4/2008 3:55:30 AM
^^agreed, but can anyone remember when a protest in America was actually a catalyst for a change?Im thinking the WTO protests in Seattle were the last big ones were people actually thought something might change, nothing did. It may have slowed some of the WTO's policies but it didnt stop them to any degree.
12/4/2008 8:08:51 AM
12/4/2008 9:26:06 AM
^yes, because it certainly isnt going to come from our government
12/4/2008 9:48:56 AM
12/4/2008 12:51:08 PM
I can accurately summarize the problem with our two party system in a single word:Democrats
12/4/2008 1:06:05 PM
12/4/2008 1:38:55 PM
1 party system
12/4/2008 4:03:56 PM
come on Shultz surely you'd approve of a 1 party system as long as it was the GOP controlling capitol hill and the white house.^ I suppose your 1st picture represents 2000-2006 when the GOP controlled the legislature and the presidency. While the 2nd picture represents our current Dem president with majorities in the senate and house.[Edited on December 4, 2008 at 4:07 PM. Reason : l]
12/4/2008 4:06:12 PM
yea we'll hear about the holocaust later on too[Edited on December 4, 2008 at 4:30 PM. Reason : ]
12/4/2008 4:30:05 PM
i swear you TKE fuckers are batshit crazy.
12/4/2008 6:29:49 PM
a party that reduces the size of government also reduces the power that's given to politicians. this is why i vote libertarian.to me, it's a choice between "big government for right winged ideals" "big government for left winged ideals" and "small government"
12/4/2008 6:55:31 PM
12/4/2008 7:33:31 PM
12/4/2008 7:44:09 PM
12/4/2008 7:52:15 PM
12/4/2008 8:48:25 PM
^ what do u expect out of a diehard libby. Don't forget all the crack moms and welfare queens are depending on your hardwork today to make that income that uncle sam takes for food stamps.
12/4/2008 10:10:35 PM
Its not the "crack moms" and welfare queens that are getting a trillion dollar bailout this year. You are complaining about someone jaywalking when there's a murder going on.
12/5/2008 12:17:33 AM
It wasn't very long ago that 3rd party players regularly won state-wide elections, and people voted on issues rather than factions.
12/5/2008 12:59:36 AM
12/5/2008 1:27:43 AM
^^^ I agree that it is not the "crack moms" and "welfare queens" that are taking up all the money right now. The trillions of dollars that we are throwing at financial institutions is the real problem and the issue comes down to both parties using stupid economic actions. This one can't be all pushed on to Bush. Clinton was the one who deregulated the banks and Bush was the one who didnt stop it when it was obviously a bad idea. The bailouts are problem from both parties... its been the Democratically lead house and senate giving all are tax dollars away and the president is too weak to push a veto through. I really disagree with the two party system but there is no way to change it without a revolutions (peaceful or violent). A representative style of government would fit the U.S. much better allowing for a much more diverse government.[Edited on December 5, 2008 at 2:54 AM. Reason : fnhs;ofj]
12/5/2008 2:51:17 AM
12/5/2008 9:38:25 AM
12/5/2008 12:08:52 PM
It probably wouldn't take a whole lot of seats to introduce a third party with significant influence, especially given how tight many of the recent majorities have been. Nor would it be unprecedented either; back during the turn of the previous century, you had 12 out of 90 Senate seats held by third parties for example. If you can score enough seats so that neither party gets a majority in the Senate, then the third party could forge a coalition in order to establish a majority and score some points.But seriously, would proportional representation really make all that much difference in the grand scheme of things? Most of the proportional representative systems I can think of right now are pretty much duels between two large parties with a sprinkling of smaller parties that traditionally align with one or the other (not all that differently from courting a particular Democratic or Republican base faction) or coalitions of left and right wing parties that tend to continuously form coalitions together. You have in Japan the LDP and the DPJ (or the JSP before), the British have Labour vs. Conservatives, the Germans Christian Democrats vs. Social Democrats, Swedish left vs. right wing coalitions, Taiwanese Pan-Blue and Pan-Green coalitions, etc. I'm not trying to undermine the argument, I'm just trying to understand why it would be so much different from what we currently have.In some ways, our current two parties really serve as large coalitions of interests.[Edited on December 5, 2008 at 3:44 PM. Reason : .]
12/5/2008 3:43:47 PM
Terd:im not a proponent of "range voting", because it's too complex for the average voter, to ever be implemented in this country. but the range voting site has a good analysis of the different types of voting systems, and how many effective political parties are represented.-- http://rangevoting.org/Duverger.htmlthe "counter examples" you read on wiki, are the few anomalies to the vast majority of Single-Member Plurality countries like the U.S. for instance, the demographics of India are so alien to the U.S. that a comparison of the political parties of the two countries can never be made. As for the U.K., they have an effective "two-and-a-half" political parties. i don't think 2 1/2 political parties is what we should strive for.
12/5/2008 5:39:25 PM
12/6/2008 12:16:51 AM