Love how the author makes the election all about their life story or some shit.

Reminds me of the liberals that supported anti lgbtq stuff or racist GOP policies and want all the credit in the world for becoming a lib

  • Philosoraptor [he/him, comrade/them]
    ·
    edit-2
    3 days ago

    As it turned out, Bush was chosen by the Supreme Court as the vote was so close, particularly in Florida, though Gore won the overall popular vote.

    What a clear and persuasive case for the power of voting in America.

    • 7bicycles [he/him]
      ·
      3 days ago

      I honestly don't understand how you can look at a country where, regularly, the person with more votes doesn't win and consider it a democracy. Like not even talking all the nitty gritty of voter suppression and gerrymandering or what have you, just straight up more votes still lose

      • came_apart_at_Kmart [he/him, comrade/them]
        ·
        3 days ago

        an important part of American Democracy™ is the importance of rewarding disenfranchisement. the electoral college and districting systems award representative voting power based on the total population of your state/district, but is influenced only by actual votes cast. so if you lock up everybody in a state and ban your enemies from voting, you get all of their voting power anyway. and that includes prison populations.

        the number of congressional districts that would have dissolved from outmigration but for a prison being built there to bolster the total human population is nonzero. a prison is like a little city in terms of funding and state power, but it's even better because they can't oppose your political project in any way.

        this is the legacy of democracy designed by genocidal slavers.

        • 7bicycles [he/him]
          ·
          3 days ago

          Excuse the ignorance but you gotta be shitting me as per prison population counts for electoral college but they can't vote

          • came_apart_at_Kmart [he/him, comrade/them]
            ·
            edit-2
            3 days ago

            lol, i am not shitting you!

            backstory: for a time i lived in a federal congressional district in a part of the country that has been subject to The Eye of Sauron / Capitalist Shithammer for a long time. it was one of the few and first places in the US to spontaneously develop a series of multiracial, anti-capitalist and militant armed insurrections. prison labor camps were liberated, stockades were burned, deputized thugs and strikebreakers were run off. eventually, the president had the military deploy some of the first military aircraft to drop explosives and chemical weapons on the striking workers and the communities that supported them. the strikes were eventually broken and the series of events has mostly been memory-holed under a project of national forgetting, the communities punished with deprivation and ruthless austerity while unfathomable riches were ripped away, poisoning their land and water. on top of this, the mass cultural products of the last 100 years spread around by capitalist media characterize the people and places as being savage, primitive, genetically inferior, and guilty of all manner of moral deviancy.

            so after a hundred years of that, one can imagine this is a place people leave in great numbers. it has been and still is administered to be as miserable as possible by corrupt officials and purposely underdeveloped despite the incredible influx of public funding into the area.... that somehow never reaches or helps actual people. not to mention, the easy resources have all been extracted with much of the old labor needs dislocated due to environmentally devastating mechanized extraction, so the prospect of work is limited. the young people with options flee. there are certainly enough people to maintain what extractive projects are still in place, but the federal representative that has lorded over this apocalyptic space, having grown very powerful within the institution over the last decades, was forecast to lose his district in a merger due to it falling below a minimum population requirement.

            that's when he shifted gears to court the carceral apparatus. a few prisons later, and his district is safe and his political machine is institutionally invincible. he's one of the most evil and powerful motherfuckers in american government and practically nobody has heard of him. he has been re-elected 21 times and holds all the purse strings. the guy has multiple highways and bridges named after him, despite not being dead or retired. that is uncommon in the US. representatives on both sides of the aisle complain about how he redirects massive federal money to his own political machine in defiance of logic and common sense, but no one is crazy enough to challenge him. his name is hal rogers and he is the Wizard of Shit.

          • miz [any, any]
            ·
            3 days ago

            3/5ths compromise for me but not for thee

      • kristina [she/her]
        ·
        3 days ago

        and its usually not even close, we're talking millions of votes discarded

    • Wheaties [she/her]
      ·
      3 days ago

      Although my prefrerrd candidate, Eugene McCarthy, won by far the largest percentage of the popular vote in the Democratic general primaries—approximately 3 million or 38.7% to Humphrey’s 161 thousand or 2.1% in a crowded field of candidates—Humphrey didn’t even bother to enter some of the state primaries. Nonetheless, party officials gave Humphrey the right to carry the Democratic banner as its presidential nominee.

      It did this by awarding Humphrey the vast majority of overall delegates in the non-primary states, thereby bringing him over the top in terms of the number of delegates needed. Talk about “rigged elections”!

      There's also this. The entire thing is him describing the democrats as party that would prefer to loose by drifting to the right, rather than utilize its left flank.