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Ralph Nader Moderates One Last 3rd-Party Debate for 2012

Late Tuesday, both the 2012 U.S. election (the popular vote at least) and the 2012 campaign season should be over. Tonight, though, whatever your ability or plans to vote are (see the current poll for a peek at what other readers claim about their intentions), you've got the chance to see one more presidential debate, to be moderated by Ralph Nader, and featuring third-party presidential contenders Gary Johnson (Libertarian), Jill Stein (Green), Virgil Goode (Constitution) and Rock Anderson (Justice). Yes, the same ones featured in another debate a few weeks back. (We promise, this is the last debate of this go-round.) If you're voting (or would, if you could) for other than the Democratic or Republican parties' candidates this year, what drives that decision?

409 comments

  1. A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you're voting (or would, if you could) for other than the Democratic or Republican parties' candidates this year, what drives that decision?

    Because it's MY vote. I'm told at work that I'm "wasting" my vote by not selecting candidate XXX, but to me, a wasted vote is a vote for something I don't agree with. I like Obama for ending the war in Iraq, I like Romney for requiring OpenDocument format (ODF) when he was governor of Mass, but at the end of the day, the candidates have more in common than not: use of drones, no plan to scale back TSA, overfunding the military, corrupted by Wall Street, etc.

    That's a loaded question to ask anyway, its similar to asking, "Why use something other than Apple/Microsoft?" Well, its about personal choice, and its about ideas. Sure, Linux will probably never win on the desktop, but you better fucking believe that Windows and MacOS are better operating systems now than they would have been had Linux never come along. The threat of losing to competition forced a better TCP/IP stack, it forced real security options in Windows, and it forced Apple to reinvent itself as a UNIX OS. And oh by the way, I happen to prefer using KDE over Apple/Windows.

    Same thing with the political parties, we have come to believe (as a nation) that R/D are the only legitimate choices, and it has lead to stagnation of ideas and of real work being done. The Federal government is broken, and cannot even pass a budget. But you better believe if Mitt Romney loses the electoral college due to the L vote, the Rs will start to distance themselves from the "abortion" issue and religious nutjobs, maybe start courting non-whites for a change and it will be for the better. Just witness how the Al Gore and the D's came around on the environment when my boy Nader took the election from him in 2000. The mandate for MPGs is going to double what it was 10 years ago, and we are finally subsidizing clean energy instead of oil.

    1. Re:A Wasted Vote... by blackfireuponus · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I am also a Nader fan and a 3 time Nader voter, and I'm voting for Jill Stein. A vote for a mainstream candidate in a non contested state is the real wasted vote.

    2. Re:A Wasted Vote... by artor3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It is nothing like asking "Apple or Microsoft?" You, as an individual, can choose Linux, but it's not like you're gonna get to have Johnson or Stein as your own personal president.

      Our election system sucks. It's just about the worst way to choose elected officials. It forces all elections to come down to a binary choice. But wishing and dreaming won't fix it. The rules are the rules, and you have to pick the best strategy within them. Insisting on only moving your pawns one square at a time will lead to disaster, no matter how much you may disagree with the double-move rule.

      Now, that said, if you're among the 85% of Americans who don't live in a swing state, then your presidential vote doesn't matter so much anyway, so you might as well try to get some extra funding for your third party of choice for the next cycle.

    3. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      the fact that there are virtually no third party members in any elected office is the real problem. i've never understood why the libertarians who can't get someone elected as mayor somewhere thinks they have a chance to win the presidential election. and on the wild, impossible chance that a third party one there is no party structure to actually get anything done. the only chance a 3rd party has is by starting small. look at the tea party, in the early 90's religious zealots and small gov types(proto tea partiers) started taking over local school boards because those elections are easy to win if one has even a small bit of organization. this is exactly how michele bachman got where she is today. of the greens and libs and the rest would actually engage the political system instead of having these self absorbed ego fests every 4 years then we might actually see a change. if nader really gave a damn about anything but himself he would have run for mayor of oakland or something and worked his way up.

    4. Re:A Wasted Vote... by flyneye · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Technically, since the Republican and Democratic parties have taken turns, term by term, doing eventually, exactly the same thing the other would do, perhaps sooner, perhaps later, for around a century, we've no reason to consider them separate parties. Minor differences between them have supplied the illusion of a separate entity, all smoke and mirrors, this is a one party system: The Repubmocrats.
              To continually do the same thing over and over, then to expect different results each time is crazy and stupid. Therefore to cast a vote in favor of the presiding one party system is logically a waste of a vote for an improving break of this mad cycle.
      You can argue that radical changes would be made by the other parties, I give you that radical changes must be corrected due to our incompetence over the last century. Yeah , it could hurt. Wanna pawn it off on your kids? Grandkids? Want more of the same ol' downward spiral for you and them? Just keep voting Repubmocrat if you do. Frankly, I would vote for a one eyed, hump backed, anarchist Hobbit, if I thought it would mean an end to Repubmocrat tyranny.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    5. Re:A Wasted Vote... by gman003 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Maybe not this election, but if candidates see that X% of voters want $IdeologyOfThirdParty, they'll start pushing that way more, because that few percent could be what wins them the election. So it still has influence, just more long-term.

      (There's also that federal funding given to any presidential campaign whose party earned over 5% of the vote in the last election. So once a party reaches that threshold, it could jump up rather quickly.)

    6. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is nothing like asking "Apple or Microsoft?" You, as an individual, can choose Linux, but it's not like you're gonna get to have Johnson or Stein as your own personal president.

      From the POV of the Linux user, it's exactly like Apple or Microsoft. As the Linux user, I am not gonna get Office or Photoshop. I *am* going to be influenced by patent litigation and proprietary codecs, however.

    7. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I was fully with you until the lack of a car analogy.

    8. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Hey assbite, Gary Johnson was governor of New Mexico twice and limited by term limits. As a Californian, I'm voting for him. Fuck off with your FUD, American discontent with the existing two-party system is at an all-time high and rising. But I wouldn't judge anybody else who chooses to vote for the third-party candidate of their choice, for they are more principled than the assholes who vote just because they want the other guy to lose.

      What America needs is a common-sense, fiscally conservative, socially liberal platform. Gary Johnson's personal and professional experience and accomplishments speak for themselves. And before any of you dismiss third-party candidates as being a "lunatic fringe..."

      The Republican and Democrat parties both became "lunatic fringes" long ago, far-removed from the population as a whole. You're fucked either way, but the more votes cast as protest votes, the quicker the change. Real change.

      -- Ethanol-fueled

    9. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A third-party vote, even if it is not destined to designate the winner, can also be a strategic decision, not just a "wasted vote".

      A significant vote for a third party sends a very strong message to the powers-that-be: you are messing up.

      They listen. They have to, if they want to be elected again.

      Further, a vote for a third-party candidate can help set up a better atmosphere for another third-party candidate 4 years from now.

      According to polls, approximately 20% of the voting American public identify themselves as "independent" (in this case meaning they do not support the "Big 2"). That is the largest number in history.

      According to other studies, it only takes 10% to make major changes, if they are persistent and sincere. We have twice that now.

      Look out, Big 2.

      And you can bet that I won't be voting for either of them. They're both so bad as to be laughable. Or they would be, if it weren't so tragic.

      --
      "Always vote for principle, though you may vote alone, and you may cherish the sweetest reflection that your vote is never lost." -- John Quincy Adams

    10. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Molt · · Score: 2

      The majority of desktop machines run Windows, does yours? If not then it's not like the Presidential election where the votes of others count just as much as yours towards who you personally are governed by.

      When it comes to choosing which OS to run you are allowed to make your own decisions, in Presidential elections you aren't allowed to choose your leader- you'll be getting the same one as the rest of your nation. As you point out issues with more mainstream OSes will bleed over to affect you but that's in no way the same.

      --
      404 Not Found: No such file or resource as '.sig'
    11. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A vote for a mainstream candidate in a non contested state is the real wasted vote.

      I think that a vote for a D or R in a contested state is even more wasted than in a non-contested state. Because the D&Rs dominate the only way to make them adopt change is to scare them into thinking they won't win the state - they have no fear in the states that are not contested.

      So if you vote 3rd party based on your conscience this time around and the D or R that you disagree with more wins the state you have exercised the only leverage you have - that a party that doesn't represent you could have had your vote but they effed it up. If they want your vote next election, they need to adopt some of the positions of the 3rd party that you did vote for. Winners keep doing what they were doing because it worked last time. Losers change their tactics in order to try to win next time.

      BTW, this is why I think the Tea Party is a sham - they aren't a real party, just a wing of the republican party. You can't vote for a tea party presidential candidate the way you can for a real 3rd party candidate.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    12. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      From the perspective of the individual voter, no state is contested. The probability of changing the outcome of a presidential election based on your single vote is astronomical. I.e. the nation as a whole must come down to your state's electoral votes and your state must be within one vote of going either way.

      Now, third parties should be careful about campaigning in closely contested states, but this isn't a concern for the individual voter. For example, the Green Party should probably have left Florida alone in 2000. By splitting the environmental vote they allowed Bush to beat Gore. While I support environmentalism, I must say that environmentalists can be one of the most counterproductive groups imaginable...

    13. Re:A Wasted Vote... by swampfriend · · Score: 2

      Keep in mind that Obama took 55% of the popular vote in 2008, but with a 62% turnout, only about 34% of eligible citizens supported him enough to go vote for him. The two major parties simply do not represent majorities in this country.

    14. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      For the nth fucking time, Gary Johnson was a Republican when he was governor. He became the Libertarian Party candidate because he lost the Republican presidential primary.

    15. Re:A Wasted Vote... by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      I live on the west coast. So by the logic people use against 3rd parties, any vote not for whatever Democrat is running this time is also a wasted vote.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    16. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      You are an idiot; plain and simple.

    17. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tactical running and voting as you have described is systemic of a broken system. In such a case even considering taking part is morally questionable.

      The only tactical argument I accept is the one in favour of efficiency, stating that it is not worth the personal cost of voting (time, gas, et cetera) for the extremely small chance of a change your vote might bring.

    18. Re:A Wasted Vote... by cffrost · · Score: 3, Informative

      I like Romney for requiring OpenDocument format (ODF) when he was governor of Mass.

      Um, you lost me here, why would a greedy venture capitalist give a flying fuck about open-source software? I just did a google search and found nothing relating to WTF you just said, or are you just a Romney-troll in disguise? In that case, you still aren't changing my vote, the O's are in for FOUR MORE YEARS bitch.

      http://www.consortiuminfo.org/standardsblog/article.php?story=20060313100529485&mode=print

      Next time, try using a search engine instead of a fucking ad engine, dipshit.

      --
      Thank you, Edward Snowden.

      "Arguments from authority are worthless." —Carl Sagan
    19. Re:A Wasted Vote... by artor3 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Long-term thinking like that doesn't work. If you give up a few presidential cycles working for your twenty year goal, then you'll find that the Overton window has shifted against you, the Supreme Court is stacked with idealogues who'll rule your every move unconstitutional, and the districts are gerrymandered to make taking over Congress impossible.

      Like I said before, if you're not in a swing state, then 3rd parties are the way to go, if only to get them federal funding. But if you are in a position where your vote could set the course of the nation for years to come, you'd be a fool to throw that away for some long-term plan that may never come to pass.

    20. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly. I stopped supporting the Libertarian platform because I grew up and joined the real world, and realized that most of them were just GOP washouts.

      While we would all love to believe that everything would be better if the government stepped out of the way, that isn't true. Human history is inconsistent with this fantasy, and Atlas Shrugged is just about as realistic as Harry Potter. With rare exception, countries with weak central governments are hellholes that no modern American would enjoy living in. Anyone who thinks we can get away with deregulation after 2008 is either a complete moron or at best deluding themselves. Taxes are the price of civilization, and regulatory forces are necessary in order to keep things in check. We need moderates on both sides of the aisle who are willing to balance out how we spend our funds and ensure our policies don't go off the deep end in either direction (Fascism and Communism are equally dangerous).

    21. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Culture20 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I found reams of the same information via Google too.

    22. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Votes for Democrat or Republican candidates are the real wasted votes.

    23. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Greyfox · · Score: 1
      Word. A mainstream vote this year is just a selection for what shade you like your president in! Other than that, it's the same health care plan (Hint: Romney won't repeal it,) the same foreign policy, and 4 more years of the president (either one) being cock-blocked by Congress! Unless, that is, you can hand either party 70% of the Senate, and signs point to no.

      The small third parties, if they get enough votes, will qualify for federal campaign dollars and guaranteed spots on the ballot in upcoming elections. So even a small percentage is a big win for choice.

      Personally I plan to write in "Ron Paul" as a big "Fuck you very much" to the Republican leadership who never showed him any respect and never seriously considered him. And also to the media, who never talked about him, even when he was in front-runner (or near-front-runner) status. I'm pretty sure some of the delegates are still pissed off at their treatment by the party, too. The man still has MY vote!

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    24. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      With rare exception, countries with weak central governments are hellholes that no modern American would enjoy living in.

      Our central government has put more of its own citizens in jail than any other on the planet. Just because you live in a privileged suburb doesn't make it real for anyone else.

    25. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Vaphell · · Score: 4, Informative

      I like Obama for ending the war in Iraq

      you mean for sticking to Dubya's plan because he was forced to, mostly because Iraq simply refused when they were offered to extend the deal? They even dared to demand they could prosecute troops committing crimes, which are immune to the local law enforcement.
      And there is that huge so called embassy for 5500 people, full of mercenaries. That pulling out is in name only.

    26. Re:A Wasted Vote... by anagama · · Score: 4, Informative

      I'm told at work that I'm "wasting" my vote by not selecting candidate XXX, but to me, a wasted vote is a vote for something I don't agree with. I like Obama for ending the war in Iraq,

      Kudos for voting third party. Me too.

      However, I feel obliged to correct a misconception about Obama. He did not "end the war in Iraq" --- he merely failed to extend it. In the months leading up to the expiration of SOFA, scheduled for Dec 2011, the Obama administration lobbied Iraq for an extension in order to keeps thousands, maybe up to 20,000 troops in Iraq. SOFA was a prerequisite for that because it forbids Iraq from prosecuting soldiers in Iraq, for crimes committed while they are in Iraq. Had Obama been successful at extending SOFA, Obama would not now be claiming to have "ended the war in Iraq" because it would still be going on. I mean, it still is, just with mercenaries and such, but it is perhaps a worthy semantic distinction. I just hate to see people give credit to Obama though, when all he did was "fail to extend," which is totally different from "intending to end."

      Citations: http://www.foreignpolicyjournal.com/2012/10/23/obamas-revisionist-history-on-ending-the-iraq-war-a-lesson-from-the-3rd-presidential-debate/

      and this from within the above:
      http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704889404576277240145258616.html

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    27. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might say that purchasing a datsun pick-up is a waste as its not a ford or a chevy, but i think that a waste of a truck is two trucks made by companies headquarters in the same city.

    28. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Vaphell · · Score: 4, Insightful

      With rare exception, countries with weak central governments are hellholes that no modern American would enjoy living in.

      China, Cuba and North Korea are a paradise then.

      Taxes are the price of civilization, and regulatory forces are necessary in order to keep things in check.

      that price is not infinite and have you ever heard of 'revolving door' or 'regulatory capture'? Do you have your lobbyist on the capitol hill? No? So why do you foolishly believe the legislation originated there is supposed to make average peon's life better?
      Besides only ex CEOs and insiders work in those regularory agencies, or fucking morons who were not smart enough to make careers on WallStreet. They aren't going to catch anybody, they are either buddies with criminals, or to incompetent to see the forest for the trees.
      Also regulations are mostly toothless, they are carefully crafted to look pretty from PR point of view but at the same not to bother the regulated too much. On top of that they attack past problems and are completely unprepared to deal with next crisis because nobody knows what exactly it will look like.

    29. Re:A Wasted Vote... by feedayeen · · Score: 4, Funny

      But he wanted to advertise his third party search engine.

    30. Re:A Wasted Vote... by anagama · · Score: 0

      Very good thinking. Voting for a third party only in "safe" districts totally eviscerates the point of voting third party. No third party voter thinks their candidate has a snowball's chance, but see it as the only way to raise issues that are never raised due to bipartisan agreement by putting establishment pols at risk of losing elections.

      As for the Tea Party, I think that is the perfect example of how naive it is to think that the GOP or DNC can be changed from within. The Tea Party was actually started by a guy who voted for Obama, but within a handful of months, it was totally hijacked by the GOP. There is no point in trying to fix the major parties -- they're a cancer on America and the only solution at this point is to excise them and irradiate the wound.

      Citation: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Denninger

      Karl's best quote on the demise/hijack of the Tea Party: "A financial blogger and ex-CEO credited with being one of the original 'founders' of the Tea Party has come out against the movement, saying it has been hijacked by the very people it was protesting and is now obsessed with 'guns, gays and God.' "

      http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2010/10/20/tea-party-founder-slams-tea-party/

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    31. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Veggiesama · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I like Obama for ending the war in Iraq, I like Romney for requiring OpenDocument format (ODF) when he was governor of Mass...

      Only on Slashdot are these comparable accomplishments...

    32. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ya and thanks for that duckduckgo guy. Its not a bad search engine.

    33. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Cyberax · · Score: 0

      Strong central government doesn't automatically make a paradise. However, lack of any government invariably makes a country become a hell-hole.

    34. Re:A Wasted Vote... by tignom · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If there are mainstream candidates you want to win, vote for them. If not, a vote for a third party is a vote for more viable candidates to choose from in the next election. In the long run, that's a meaningful vote.

    35. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      because I grew up and joined the real world

      What's it like in the "real world"? Did you escape from the matrix or something? Do you realize that things probably aren't as clear-cut as you're making them out to be, and what you just said most likely simply reflects your preferences?

    36. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Repubmocrats
      But there is still completely opposite party - the Demolicans.

    37. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what would happen if federalized institutions were instead privatized entirely - which is exactly what "starve the beast/drown the baby in the bathwater" small government fanatics want? Large organizations would eviscerate whatever remaining rights you thought you had. Survival of the biggest, the richest, would trample and stomp all over ordinary citizens, violently. Gangs would rule over the cowed helpless masses, much like whats going on in Mexico right now. When the cartels in latin america decide to take over border states, what - send private militias, weekend warriors and mercenary armies to battle? Are they more likely to be immune to bribery and coercion than soldiers in navy seal team 6? There would be even more for-profit prison systems, no EPA, no Dept. of the Interior. Conglomerates would dump toxic waste upstream of your city's water supply sources: streams & rivers, let it soak into the water tables without penalty. Let Westinghouse regulate themselves, they won't cut corners when it comes to safely disposing/storing spent nuclear fuel. Let the oil companies drill wherever they want, fast and reckless because its cheaper and fuck non-human life, especially in the oceans.. So what if fossil fuels are heating up the planet. Let factory farms do whatever they have to farm animals, they're just dumb animals tormented for life. Why should you care? Large organizations would eviscerate whatever remaining rights you thought you had. Survival of the biggest, the baddest, the richest, would trample and stomp all over ordinary citizens, violently. Gangs would rule over the cowed helpless masses, much like whats going on in Mexico right now. When the cartels in latin america decide to ratchet up operations & more aggresively take over border states, what are we going to do? - send private militias, weekend warriors and mercenary armies to battle? Are they more likely to be immune to bribery and coercion than the type of federal soldiers in navy seal team 6? Tea baggers and their idiotic fantasies are a scourge to the health of this country.

    38. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Vaphell · · Score: 4, Interesting

      who says about lack of any government? Cutting back and getting rid of entirely are 2 different things and most libertarians suggest the former. It doesn't matter though because every time a libertarian says something reasonable like 'paying taxes on working and subsidizing not working is counterproductive and the govt is not supposed to micromanage every detail of your life, what you eat, who you sleep with' he is 'encouraged' to go to Somalia.

      also correlation is not causation - that the rich countries recycle huge part of their GDP through government channels doesn't mean the govt is the source of prosperity. It may as well be the other way around: prosperous countries can afford to blow money on fluff and would be more prosperous if they didn't.

    39. Re:A Wasted Vote... by hrvatska · · Score: 2

      A third party isn't going to be viable nationally until it has a strong local base. If it can't get enough votes to get local officials elected it's unlikely to be able to get votes for its presidential candidates. Local office holders can be an incredibly valuable resource for a national campaign. When people's mayors, town council members, country executives and the like are seen to be members of a third party it makes that party a much more attractive option. Parties like the Greens and the Libertarians need to build locally before they can hope to have an impact on national races. And building locally doesn't just mean having members in a locale, it means having an active party organization that can get people elected to local offices.

    40. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      With rare exception, countries with weak central governments are hellholes that no modern American would enjoy living in.

      China, Cuba and North Korea are a paradise then.

      Taxes are the price of civilization, and regulatory forces are necessary in order to keep things in check.

      that price is not infinite and have you ever heard of 'revolving door' or 'regulatory capture'? Do you have your lobbyist on the capitol hill? No? So why do you foolishly believe the legislation originated there is supposed to make average peon's life better? Besides only ex CEOs and insiders work in those regularory agencies, or fucking morons who were not smart enough to make careers on WallStreet. They aren't going to catch anybody, they are either buddies with criminals, or to incompetent to see the forest for the trees. Also regulations are mostly toothless, they are carefully crafted to look pretty from PR point of view but at the same not to bother the regulated too much. On top of that they attack past problems and are completely unprepared to deal with next crisis because nobody knows what exactly it will look like.

      What are you suggesting? You think Goldman Sachs, Monsanto, Exxon/Chevron/Shell/BP, Westinghouse gives a gnat's shit about the masses and of dipshits who shill for no regulation like you? "Regulation" is what's keeping your drinking water drinkable, the air you breath breathable, keeping your body relatively free of known carcinogens and other toxins. But people like you want to get rid of all that. You trust the free market will take care of your well being. The vast majority of people in this country would spiral down into 3rd world status oblivion - and if you're not financially independent, then that includes you.

    41. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      i've read that the TP came from the grassroot movement supporting Ron Paul in 2007 during his campaign and was mostly about fiscal conservatism.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_Party_movement

      Perhaps the first "Tea Party" event on record was an event for Ron Paul dubbed "Boston TeaParty07" on December 16, 2007. This event included the throwing of boxes labeled "tea" and "IRS" among others, into the bay. This event was also notable in making online "Money Bomb" history as the largest one-day fundraising event at $6.5 million.

      later the movement was coopted by the Bachmanns and the Palins of the GOP and the modern TeaParty was born.

    42. Re:A Wasted Vote... by murdocj · · Score: 1

      I hope you aren't seriously comparing ending a war with supporting a document format.

    43. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically, since the Republican and Democratic parties have taken turns, term by term, doing eventually, exactly the same thing the other would do, perhaps sooner, perhaps later, for around a century, we've no reason to consider them separate parties. Minor differences between them have supplied the illusion of a separate entity, all smoke and mirrors, this is a one party system: The Repubmocrats.

      I believe you mean The Democratic-Republican Party. The party split into Democrats and Republicans because the Republicans opposed slavery and the Democrats supported it. Now that slavery's no longer an issue, they can be one happy party again (except the Dems still see racist bogeymen everywhere because they are still racist at heart).

      Pulled straight out of Rush Limbaugh's fat ass.

    44. Re:A Wasted Vote... by cjsm · · Score: 1

      I'm replying to this because when moderating I I thought I had clicked on Insightful, but Redundant come up instead, thus I'm canceling out the negative vote.

      --
      This ad space for rent.
    45. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Teancum · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just because you think Mitt Romney is the devil incarnate and ready to harvest your soul taking America down a dangerous road doesn't mean that he may have a few redeeming qualities too. There were several Slashdot stories about Massachusetts under the Romney governorship and adopting the Open Document Format with some pretty sound reasons for doing that. If you are too new here to remember those stories or so closed minded to have skipped over them, I can't help your ignorance on this subject.

      You don't need to do a google search to find this stuff and certainly if you are older you can remember significant things like that... as his move did set the standard which pushed Microsoft and some other companies to adopt the Open Document Format as at least an option with their word processors and even do a pretty decent job of supporting the format.

      While I don't think Barack Obama is the messiah either and in fact I am hoping he doesn't get re-elected, he has several redeeming qualities about him too. In particular I like Obama's space policy as a massive improvement over what George W. Bush or for that matter anybody since Lyndon Johnson. I can certainly name a few other things that I admire about his service to America, so why is it that you must be such a jerk and fail to see any good qualities in another person who lives on this planet?

    46. Re:A Wasted Vote... by FoolishOwl · · Score: 1

      Frankly, I would vote for a one eyed, hump backed, anarchist Hobbit, if I thought it would mean an end to Repubmocrat tyranny.

      Actually, that sounds like a pretty good candidate to me.

    47. Re:A Wasted Vote... by caballew · · Score: 1

      He left the Republican party when it became obvious that the Republican power brokers would never let his message be heard. Crony capitalism would never survive under his leadership of the Republican party.

    48. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Clsid · · Score: 2

      I agree with a lot of what you said, but I'm not sure that Linux was the reason why Apple reinvented Mac OS. If you read the famous Steve Jobs bio by Isaacson, the whole upgrade was something of a dire need in order to compete with Microsoft. They were looking at BeOS or NeXT, after failing miserably with some internal projects. In the end, NeXT won the deal, and since NeXT itself used a Mach Unix kernel at its core, it was only logical they were going to choose BSD to build Mac OS X on.

      But as far as ome other stuff where Linux was clearly the motivation, remember how Windows 7 copied KDE's taskbar.

    49. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Vaphell · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You are misrepresenting my point about subsidizing not working and you know it. Subsidies in general result in more of the thing that is subsidized, are you telling me that generous welfare system causes disabilities and vetarans?

      1) "Not working" includes children. Should we return to Dicken's Englang?

      No. But if you think that passing the law by the govt is enough to make child labor dissapear, you are very wrong. That is putting the cart before the horse. In reality it's the other way around. Society needs to be wealthy enough to pass on the child labor, the law is merely icing on the cake that was baked already.
      Starving families in 3rd world countries don't give a fuck and sure as hell won't allow their children to play and learn and have happy careless childhood when their very existence is on the line. If you passed such a law there, you'd create even more pathology, as these children would still be expected to bring money home, but now they would be forced to beg (optional mutilation for greater efficiency) or into illegal activities: crime, prostitution.
      Besides if you are a parent, it's your fucking responsibility to provide for your offspring first and foremost, not everybody else's.

      2) "Not working" includes veterans. Probably we just should let them die on the streets.

      i got an idea. Stop waging wars on brown people, there won't be any veterans, problem solved.

      3) "Not working" includes disabled people. Natural selection FTW!

      being disabled sucks, no doubt, but do you think that whining about it will make their lifes better, with the sense of fulfillment? No, treating them as a special, worse kind of people who are not able to wipe their own ass without help causes 2 things:
      - lower self esteem
      - increased helplessness and dependency on the system
      It's simple, lower expectations and you can bet the people will lower their performance to match them.

      4) "Not working" includes retired people. Invisible hand of market wiped out your investments (remember, no FDIC!)? Tough luck.

      Investments and FDIC? i thought FDIC secured boring deposits up to $X. I know the libertarians believe that such programs make people not do their due diligence because it's easier and more convenient to delegate the responsibility to bureaucrats than to cover your own ass (which means more malinvestments and outright scams slip through) but seriously, that's your main criticism? no FDIC?
      Besides if there is a situation where much of the fake wealth evaporates, the only thing the govt can do is to paper the problem over and restore nominal number, but not the original purchasing power behind it. If such a disaster happens you can be sure there was a bubble and the correction was unavoidable either way. Besides the govt is not exactly a friend of retirees, they are that huge ugly position in the budget and the govt is glad the inflation lowers the burden of promises.

      In the absence of a single freaking example of a libertarian country that is not a hell-hole like Somalia, we are forced to conclude that the redistributionist government is necessary for a healthy society. The only question is the degree of redistribution of wealth.

      Does not follow. Redistribution of wealth is a direct result of democracy, because politicians play their electorate by divide and conquer strategies, and offering concessions to different interest groups in order to win votes. Underwater mortgage? we will help you! $20 worth of birth control too expensive? you got it! Farmers in redneck states are unhappy? Corn subsidies for everybody! Students know shit? Throw even more money at the problem and give govt backed loans to everybody!

    50. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Cyberax · · Score: 0

      Does not follow.

      It follows. The reason modern successful democracies are successful is because they strive to provide equal opportunity to all their citizens. Only mechanisms for that are rapidly unraveling in the US.

      Redistribution of wealth is a direct result of democracy, because politicians play their electorate by divide and conquer strategies, and offering concessions to different interest groups in order to win votes. Underwater mortgage? we will help you! $20 worth of birth control too expensive? you got it! Farmers in redneck states are unhappy? Corn subsidies for everybody! Students know shit? Throw even more money at the problem and give govt backed loans to everybody!

      And it works. Turns out that actually HELPING people in need (even if they are partially to blame for it) helps to build a prosperous society. It's much better to give a helping hand than to kick a lying man.

    51. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

      That's a loaded question to ask anyway, its similar to asking, "Why use something other than Apple/Microsoft?"

      No, it is nothing like that. The only way it would be comparable would be if someone asked you, "Would you prefer to use OS X, Windows, Linux, or BSD?" and then, regardless of what you said, made you use one of the first two choices.

      Come late January, the President of the United States of America will be either Barack Obama or Mitt Romney. Deal with it.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    52. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

      Atlas Shrugged is just about as realistic as Harry Potter.

      I think you owe J.K. Rowling an apology.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    53. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

      the Republican and Democratic parties have taken turns, term by term, doing eventually, exactly the same thing the other would do, perhaps sooner, perhaps later, for around a century

      This is true. It is also true that they have generally not done the same things at the same time. Maybe in fifty years, the Republicans will be doing what the Democrats are doing now, or vice versa; it does not follow from this that Romney would do the same things from 2013 to 2017 that Obama would do, or vice versa. In fact, whichever of them wins (and it will be one of those two) will almost certainly do substantially different things than his opponent would have done.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    54. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This youtube series explains how voting systems like the one used in the US got there, and some other alternatives.

      Personally I disfavor political parties, and thus dislike Mixed-Member Proportional representation; but at least that would still be better than what we have.

      http://www.youtube.com/course?list=EC7679C7ACE93A5638

    55. Re:A Wasted Vote... by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Only on Slashdot are these comparable accomplishments...

      He didn't say they were, and if that is all you got out of it, you should probably reread it.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    56. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 2

      With rare exception, countries with weak central governments are hellholes that no modern American would enjoy living in.

      China, Cuba and North Korea are a paradise then.

      You fail logic forever.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    57. Re:A Wasted Vote... by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      > the O's are in for FOUR MORE YEARS bitch.

      The next time someone here asks how we arrived at a point where the only ones with a shot at winning are two corrupt and manipulative parties that are carbon copies on all but a few wedge issues, please point them at this post and remind them that this is an "average voter".

    58. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, it would be better for them to focus attention on states that split their electoral votes. That maximizes the chances of them earning an electoral vote and minimizes the chances of them pissing their potential base of voters off.

      Even Ross Perot who did better than any 3rd party candidate since Teddy Roosevelt, only manages 18% or so of the vote and zero electoral votes.

      But really, this fixation on 3rd party candidates is counter productive. It would be better to focus on making districting commitees nonpartisan or bipartisan and getting top two primaries nation wide, forcing the parties to nominate less and less extreme candidates if they want a shot at the Oval Office.

    59. Re:A Wasted Vote... by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      So then, as posted elsewhere, we're left with "Sophie's Choice"? You know how that tragedy turned out, right?

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    60. Re:A Wasted Vote... by boots19 · · Score: 2

      Long-term thinking like that doesn't work. There've only been two elections since the Reagan years where a plausible argument can be made that a marginally viable 3rd-party candidate affected the outcome of the presidential election: 1992 and 2000.

      Yet the Overton window has still shifted radically rightward over the last 30+ years. The relatively paltry number of people in this country who have decided to vote for the candidate that best represents their values can hardly be blamed for that shift. It's a lot more plausible to blame the masses, especially those who lean to the left, who've decided to vote for centrist after centrist (i.e., "the lesser evil"), though the Republicans continue to nominate more and more radically right-wing candidates.

      Democrats are like the Baltimore Ravens of politics. They load up with awesome, even inspirational defensive players and thus often rank highly in fewest points allowed, win a fair number of games as a result and go to the playoffs most years. Yeah, they might even win a Super Bowl. But mostly they lose the biggest games. Meanwhile the Manning brothers and Tom Brady lead teams to championship after championship.

      Eventually you have to draft a QB a team can believe in.

    61. Re:A Wasted Vote... by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Why was this modded down? You know it took a lot of republicans to get the civil rights act passed in 1964? There seems to be some serious role reversal if anybody believes the democrats are on the side of civil liberties. Even the (in)famous John Ashcroft was on the right side of some issues as the democrats attempted to spy on us all. And some Supreme Court justices appointed by a republican turned out to be a pleasant surprise (though I'll grant that was totally unintended.. serendipity at its best).

      Let there be no doubt, Obama is a traitor to the cause. I couldn't expect much, if any, worse from Romney. Neither get my vote. Let the chips fall where they may.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    62. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Only a strong government can limit and oppose the power of strong corporations.

      And you also need to indoctrinate all children in grade-school and religious studies in values supportive of a libertarian society. They would need to literally be terribly ashamed to behave badly. If they don't, laws won't be enough to keep them in check.

      Those are the holes in the libertarian philosophy.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    63. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if you vote 3rd party based on your conscience this time around and the D or R that you disagree with more wins the state you have exercised the only leverage you have

      Yes, this makes a lot of sense. It's like when you want to train yourself to kick faster, so you take a shotgun and fire at your foot. Didn't move out of the way fast enough? Well, that'll definitely give your foot something to think about next time!

    64. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Glock27 · · Score: 0

      Um, you lost me here, why would a greedy venture capitalist give a flying fuck about open-source software? I just did a google search and found nothing relating to WTF you just said, or are you just a Romney-troll in disguise? In that case, you still aren't changing my vote, the O's are in for FOUR MORE YEARS bitch.

      The 0's are the biggest disgrace in the history of the Presidency.

      They'll be out come January, bet on it. Just try not too cry too hard.

      R&R '12!!! It's time to get the economy working again!

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    65. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Seeteufel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Romney seems to be the better president for the US, but I am no US citizen. It is better to have a right wing moderate in office and a left opposition. Where is the Pirate Party candidate btw.? Why can't the US get a decent universal vote election system?

    66. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Seeteufel · · Score: 1

      The issue is that the Us election system is broken, so you need a new constitution of the people to replace the 1790 free masonry constitution.

    67. Re:A Wasted Vote... by travbrad · · Score: 1

      In my view you'd be a fool to throw away a vote on a candidate who you don't agree with. If you really think there would be a big difference between a Romney or Obama presidency you are kidding yourself. They say anything they can to try to make themselves seem different, but if you actually look at their records rather than their words they are extremely similar. http://www.politicalcompass.org/uselection2012

    68. Re:A Wasted Vote... by DrXym · · Score: 1, Informative

      Barack Obama's most redeeming quality is he doesn't sincerely believe in magic hats or underwear. There are clips of Romney speaking about Mormonism on Youtube and the guy is anything but rational. The needle on the beady-eyed-crazy-cult-meter goes right up to Tom Cruise levels.

    69. Re:A Wasted Vote... by turp182 · · Score: 1

      I prefer "Republicrat". I use it all of the time to piss people off on the Wall Street Journal forums. They can't defend it.

      --
      BlameBillCosby.com
    70. Re:A Wasted Vote... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      I understand your post, however, they do have mayors. Just not very much any higher than that.

      http://www.lp.org/candidates/elected-officials

    71. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Vaphell · · Score: 2

      it works until it doesn't. Look at Greece. All parties competed who can promise the most free shit to the plebes. Huge chunk of population shuffling paper and drinking coffee in government sector, retirements at 50, hundreds of privileged occupations and what not. Pretty much the only thing that was not promised was the moon. Of course everybody knows the only problem is that they can't print their way to prosperity because of the euro currency, not the fact the whole country was ridden with pathologies and deserves its fate (it takes 2 to tango, people deserve their politicians)

      Turns out that actually HELPING people in need (even if they are partially to blame for it) helps to build a prosperous society. It's much better to give a helping hand than to kick a lying man.

      In need? How is that possible that everybody and their dog is in need? When everybody is, the meaning of the word depreciates and people in real need are lost in the noise.
      And what about the reinforced helplessness, increased dependency on the almighty state? That breeds the kind of people unable to wipe their own ass. American prosperity was not built by entitled whiny bitches who expect free obamaphone every week, was it?

    72. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Romney isn't a right wing moderate. He is a kleptocratic Plutarch.

    73. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      A bugger disgrace than George Bush?

      A bigger disgrace than Richard Nixon?

      How exactly is he more disgraceful than those criminals?

      Can you actually explain that?

    74. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      I've also voted nader in the past. It was one of the perks of living in Mississippi, my vote didn't matter so I could vote closer to my conscience. Now in Florida I am forced to grudgingly vote for Obama, that is the price I have to pay to keep the abomination Romney/Ryan out of the whitehouse.

    75. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Fiscal conservatives don't believe that they can balance the budget by cutting taxes. That is the mark of a fiscal irrational.

      A fiscal conservative would balance the budget by raising taxes and trimming waste, mostly from the largest pool of funds available in the discretionary budget, military spending.

    76. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      10 points for Griffendor!

    77. Re:A Wasted Vote... by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      In some states, writing in a candidate for president is LITERALLY throwing your vote away, as some states only count write in votes for cadidates who have filed letters of intent and discard other write in votes.

      That being said, Libertarian in every race that has a libertarian candidate as a big fuck you to the Repub party that I am registered with.

    78. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul is a state level theocrat, thus there was no need to co-opt anything, his positions line up well with the Bachmanns of this world, he just prefers to not talk about them too much and shroud them in a guise of constitutionalism (while, e.g. trying to remove constiturional powers of the surpreme court).

    79. Re:A Wasted Vote... by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      First of all, Somalia is NOT libertarian in any way. And if you want an example of a libertarian government, I suggest you look at the United States of American until maybe the mid 1800s.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    80. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Hatta · · Score: 2

      Any vote for either major party is not just a wasted vote, it's an immoral vote.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    81. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Hatta · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The Supreme Court is already stacked with ideologues who'll rule every good policy unconstitutional and districts are gerrymandered to make taking over Congress impossible. The electoral system is already thoroughly broken, so what's to lose?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    82. Re:A Wasted Vote... by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      The issue is that the Us election system is broken, so you need a new constitution of the people to replace the 1790 free masonry constitution.

      This has been my mantra for some time. Unfortunately, Democrats and Republicans alike tend to respond to this suggestion with incredulous shock. I've been told so many times that the U.S. Constitution is a perfect document designed by geniuses. An equally ignorant argument I've been given is that the ability to amend the Constitution compensates for it's antiquity -- never mind that given the polarized state of the nation, it's unlikely that the Constitution will ever be amended again.

      I think what most people don't understand is that the U.S. Constitution isn't the supreme law of the land. It's so anachronistic that in order to apply it to modern society we've relied on Supreme Court decision after Supreme Court decision in which the Constitution is 'interpreted' in such a way that always seems to adhere to the values of the Justices. Court precedent is the supreme law of the land. Whenever someone offends logic by suggesting that this country is run the way James Madison envisioned it I have two words for them: "Commerce Clause."

      One of the biggest problems is it's considered anti-American to question the Constitution, the founding fathers, and this abstract notion of freedom that most Americans believe to be exclusively American. This is how we teach history and civics in our K-12 schools -- we put nationalism before education. We put James Madison on a pedestal and act as if he had the foresight to create a government system that would work for the rest of time, yet we conveniently gloss over his total lack of foresight regarding the War of 1812. We don't deal with our history honestly and thus we're unable to correctly diagnose and correct current problems that these revered historical figures have put us in. Of course, another common attitude is that history is boring or irrelevant.

      This is why education is the political issue I prioritize above all others. If the general population was better educated then a multitude of problems would correct themselves and we'd be more receptive to replacing our outdated system of government with something that's efficient, flexible, and works for the best interests of society as a whole rather than the aristocratic powerbrokers who are currently in control.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    83. Re:A Wasted Vote... by RandomFactor · · Score: 1

      While you couldn't swing a cat in those circles without hitting one, James Madison wasn't a Freemason.

      Also, the thought of a Constitutional Convention sends shivers down my spine more then four (more) years of Obamney with a like minded majority in the House and Senate.

      --
      --- Mercutio was right.
    84. Re:A Wasted Vote... by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      "It's much better to give a helping hand than to kick a lying man."

      Too bad you have to kick men to "give" a "helping" hand. If we could just gift people prosperity at no cost to society we'd all be happy and eat candy all day. But here in the real world there is no such thing as a free lunch. Politicians HELP people in need by stealing from people.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    85. Re:A Wasted Vote... by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      Yes because comparing a big government state to China, Cuba, and North Korea is much worse logic than comparing a libertarian state to Somalia...

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    86. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Chickan · · Score: 1

      Both candidates are just populists. They say what they think we want to hear, and that is about it. They have no principles, as principles would keep some portion of the population from voting for you. The fact that anyone in America hates either candidate shows that the election propaganda is working. They want you to vote against someone, instead of for someone.

    87. Re:A Wasted Vote... by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      Unless you believe in the Laffer Curve in which case cutting taxes can RAISE revenue. But regardless of your tax stance, you cannot balance the budget without cuts. AND REAL CUTS, not cuts to proposed increases.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    88. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Nadaka · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You get it wrong. If anyone does not hate these candidates, it means the propaganda is working. They are both terrible terrible people who do not deserve to lead. I just happen to think that America can endure 4 more years of Obama better than it could 4 endure years of Romney.

    89. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Yea. That has been refuted.

      http://graphics8.nytimes.com/news/business/0915taxesandeconomy.pdf

      Unfortunately that the an article of faith for the republicans and the had the report was withdrawn under threat.

    90. Re:A Wasted Vote... by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 1

      The threat of losing to competition forced a better TCP/IP stack, it forced real security options in Windows, and it forced Apple to reinvent itself as a UNIX OS

      Only on Slashdot can voting options be comapred to Xenix, BSD and Windows Internet Firewall.

      --
      Join the Slashcott! Feb 10 thru Feb 17!
    91. Re:A Wasted Vote... by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      The NFL analogy is terrible. Tom Brady hasn't won a Super Bowl since the Patriot's defense became mediocre. Eli Manning is the luckiest QB ever and his defense puts him in a position to win -- the Giants are more analogous to the Ravens than the Patriots. Peyton Manning is the biggest playoff underachiever of all time, likely because the Colts had crappy defenses (and they have the same # of Super Bowl victories as the Ravens in the last decade).

      The biggest challenge facing the Ravens is that they're in the same division as the Steelers, which is the most dominant NFL team on both offense and defense. But the Steelers are owned by people who care more about winning than making money, which is a luxury many teams such as their Ohio rivals and the Ravens can't afford. Green Bay and the Patriots are the only teams that can truly invest in their teams with a win-at-all-costs model.

      It was a noble attempt at an analogy, but it's just a bad comparison. There's a ton of parity in the NFL and for the Ravens to be competitive year after years means they're a success. It's not like they're the Browns (anymore - har har). If they sacrificed their defense for some hot-shot QB they probably wouldn't be nearly as successful.

      Here's a football analogy: long-term success is built on short-term success. If you draft every hot-shot QB you can, like the Browns, you're always sacrificing the present for some mythical future that probably won't come about. Worry about success now and then the appropriate Supreme Court justices will find their way on the bench, the legislation will creep its way in the direction of your goal, and the public will be more receptive to your ideas. Teams that worry about short term success build long term success because if a team does good this year, more free agents will want to play for them next year. More fans will fill out the stadiums. More jerseys will be sold.

      Those 1992 and 2000 elections had massive long-term effects.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    92. Re:A Wasted Vote... by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      The Supreme Court is already stacked with ideologues who'll rule every good policy unconstitutional and districts are gerrymandered to make taking over Congress impossible. The electoral system is already thoroughly broken, so what's to lose?

      The chance to change that.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    93. Re:A Wasted Vote... by flyneye · · Score: 1

      I've gone back and forth with it, Republicrat rolls off the tongue more musically, but Repubmocrat more evenly demonstrates the duality of of the singularity. Either way, Good Job!

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    94. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      it works until it doesn't. Look at Greece. All parties competed who can promise the most free shit to the plebes.

      Look at Somalia! That'd happen if you elect Repubs! It's the same fallacy.
      Greeks in fact work MORE than citizens of most of Eurozone countries and have LESS government per capita than in Germany. So please, get your story straight. Are you saying that Greece should get more government?

      In need? How is that possible that everybody and their dog is in need? When everybody is, the meaning of the word depreciates and people in real need are lost in the noise.

      "Everybody"? Normally about 3% of people are in need (I'm talking about disabled people, jobless without insurance, etc.) That's not "everybody".

    95. Re:A Wasted Vote... by flyneye · · Score: 1

      Nice historical note, sorry some demmy gave you flame instead of informative. It may show you to be correct about their race-phobia.
      That of course is why I say Repubmocrat instead of Democrat-Republican, so as not to confuse the concepts.
      I did think of Dempublicans, but it wasn't a good split and sounded too Germanic to convey the point.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    96. Re:A Wasted Vote... by flyneye · · Score: 1

      I like that! I'll probably stick with Repubmocrats, but Demolicans has that musical thing going on.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    97. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Chickan · · Score: 1

      We are arguing the same point. I meant if Americans hate one side enough to vote for the other side, the propaganda is working. Both candidates are painting the other as pure evil incarnate, so you have to vote for our side to keep them from power. In reality, Americans would be much better served without either of these candidates.

    98. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you telling me that generous welfare system causes disabilities and vetarans?

      As the husband of a radiologist, I can tell you it does cause lots of "disabilities". My wife tells me if she's reading a perfectly good spine, it's a disability determination. There is no shortage of people content to live on welfare and contribute nothing. There are even "professionals" that help them get benefits for a cut. An economy is stronger with more contributors and people need motivation to contribute (work). The issues are complicated, namely determining legitimate needs, but make no mistake, a "generous" welfare system encourages laziness in the segment of the population which lacks ambition and is comfortable with that standard of living.

    99. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i've never understood why the libertarians who can't get someone elected as mayor somewhere thinks they have a chance to win the presidential election. and on the wild, impossible chance that a third party one there is no party structure to actually get anything done.

      Even with one or two 3rd party representative in the senate you may see change. If the rest of the senate is split 49 - 49 due to a couple libertarians who refuse to vote anything that goes against their principles (or even just voting no on everything) you'll see change. In that situation neither party can push through a purely partisan bill and they will be forced to compromise/cooperate. The larger that 3rd party gets, the less you'll see any party "take control" and push through whatever the hell they want (obomacare, tax cuts, subsidies, anything that's purely one parties agenda). But it may only take a couple wins to start having an effect even if there aren't enough to organize something more. As for having a presidential candidate, it promotes the idea that there are options even when they never win. It raises awareness just being there.

      Now why are there multiple 3rd parties? I would think that getting all the votes behind one of those parties would be helpful at this point just to get one or two in to have the effects mentioned above. OTOH that goes against the idea of "vote for what you want" which is the rationale for anyone not voting D or R. I also find it unfortunate that the libertarians talk so much about legalization of pot. It probably brings them a lot of vote from a certain demographic, but I suspect it also limits their votes from a lot of people who like their more general ideas.

    100. Re:A Wasted Vote... by flyneye · · Score: 1

      Yeah it's kind of like worlds slowest (dis)assembly line. The work goes through but in no particularly useful order. But you still end up with the same crap at the end of the line. I don't believe much of it takes 50 years to flip, some only takes a change of the guard. They both agree way too much on the biggest issues. How far can they stray, a little at a time, from the Constitution, and support it, Judge by Judge on the Supreme Court, to change what is beneficial for all, to something beneficial to them and their ilk, while selling our future down the river. I have proudly cast an early ballot against Repubmocrat Tyranny. Of course, my candidate will not win, but I am not trying to bet on a horse,or pick who is popular to all the idiots all the time, I am voting for a way that I see as better. Those who say you waste your vote voting outside the one party system are just unpaid, stupid sycophants unwittingly doing the work of their obviously smarter overlords.
                Sadly you are right, one of the Repubmocrats will sit on the throne once again. It doesn't matter which one in the long and short of it. What one doesn't , the other will, ad infinitum, ad nauseum, and down we go...

      I do see Omama as the worst anything ever. Politicio, actor, tenant, public speaker, blatant sell out, Mousketeer, you name it. But I'm sure Romney will bring his own brand of shuck and jive to the table.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    101. Re:A Wasted Vote... by danbert8 · · Score: 1

      Oh really, so the ideal tax rate is 100% then? The Laffer Curve has not been refuted. The point of maximum revenue may be under dispute. However, the point of maximum revenue may not be the ideal point either.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    102. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Soluzar · · Score: 2

      Maybe because he doesn't believe in spending money on paid solutions when the free one is adequate? I think that for a lot (if admittedly not all) uses, ODF and Libre Office are adequate.

    103. Re:A Wasted Vote... by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      Look out, Big 2.

      Look out third parties more likely. Strategic voting in the US means that the Big 2 will change before a third party will grow big enough to do anything. Once any third party starts to become a threat, the Big 2 will just start stealing planks out of their platform, divide up their issues, and get those voters. That being said, it's one of the reasons I vote 3rd party because the Big 2 care more about their votes than those in their own party.

    104. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fascism and communism are not the extremes of the political spectrum and if you think that by "growing up " means voting for a bunch of name calling, bickering, childish republicans and democrats then congratulations on growing up.

    105. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aint that the truth. I've been saying that to people a lot. Both the Democrats and Republicans have become wild-eyed, foaming at the mouth, fear mongering, crazies. They can't get anything done, and their whole life consists of trying to destroy the other "team", not actually representing their constituents. I feel like banging my head against a wall every time I hear someone who is a member of either party act like the apocalypse is going to occur unless you vote for their political party. . . which is just as full of crap/devoid of substance (depending on whether you're a glass full/empty sort of person) as the other one.

      I just can't get caught up in this rage filled punch and judy shows that our two party dictatorship has become. I vote third party because I actually care about issues, and I support candidates who don't insult my intelligence. Third party candidates, whether you agree with this one or that one, are almost always about their platform rather than "defeating the evil hoard over at Party X"

      I guess when politics are ruled by all the far right/far left extremists, all the moderate people get labeled as the "lunatic fringe". Funny how that works, eh?

    106. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Creepy · · Score: 1

      Personally, I don't give a rip which one gets in. I tend to agree more with Obama on social policy, but I actually find him way too far right in supporting expensive drug war that has shown little results (money much better spent in the classroom, IMO) and way too far left in his efforts to dismantle the nuclear deterrent without other governments also buying in.

      It has come to the point where we no longer vote for a person, we vote for a platform. Contrary to what the big parties say, there are no wasted votes; a vote for a third party is a vote in protest of the platforms, and this is really the only protest we independent/centrists have left, as there is no national centrist party (as the Whigs once were until Lincoln formed the liberal Republican party and the Whigs disbanded over a split on slavery). Since I count myself as fiscally conservative, socially liberal and neither party has put forward a plan that, in the real world, provides a very much necessary budget surplus (Paul Ryan's plan that Romney backs requires pipe dream economics, Obama's track record speaks for itself), I have serious reservations about both major parties. While my beliefs are largely Libertarian, many things the Libertarian platform sits on are too much, too fast. You can't just cut Social Security by more than half (down to 47%) as Gary Johnson has proposed) - it may be an ultimate goal to not have to abandon the programs entirely someday, but it has to be a gradual change so that future retirees can plan for it accordingly. This is largely my problem with most third parties - they propose radical changes, not gradual changes.

      I also don't like the fact that neither party really goes after the federal reserve or the FDA or the NRC or other government organizations that are essentially bought off by industry lobby groups that have no competing lobby groups. For instance, the NRC is lobbied by the NEI, which is essentially funded for and exists as a propaganda wing of large utilities and vastly outfunds any anti-nuclear (i.e. Greenpeace) or nuclear choice (non-existent, but, say backing LFTR) organizations. The FDA is in the pocket of the pharmaceutical lobby (PhRMA and Biotech Industry Organization) and has spent more than any other organization on influencing government.

    107. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess the war on drugs had nothing to do with it. Hmmmm So, when are the liquor cartels going to be taking over the streets of America. . . . Oh wait, we already got rid of that problem. I wonder how we did that. Carry on with your fear mongering. ;)

    108. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Hatta · · Score: 1

      By voting for the same people who are empowered by the current corrupt system? How exactly do you think that's going to work?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    109. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      The congressional progressive caucus has put forward a real balanced budget plan. The only one of its kind.

      http://cpc.grijalva.house.gov/the-peoples-budget/

    110. Re:A Wasted Vote... by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      The issue is that the Us election system is broken, so you need a new constitution

      The US election system isn't sent entirely (or even mostly) by the Constitution, as many of the key details are set in statute and regulation. So, even if we assume that the problem is that the election system is broken, you need to make a much more specific argument about how it is broken and what structure should replace it to support the contention that it is broken in a manner which requires a Constitutional fix rather than a less-drastic remedy.

    111. Re:A Wasted Vote... by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      One of the biggest problems is it's considered anti-American to question the Constitution, the founding fathers, and this abstract notion of freedom that most Americans believe to be exclusively American.

      A trend which was first noted within the life of the founders, and condemned by several of them (Jefferson certainly.)

    112. Re:A Wasted Vote... by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      I live on the west coast. So by the logic people use against 3rd parties, any vote not for whatever Democrat is running this time is also a wasted vote.

      No, I think you misunderstand the argument. It is not that "when you choose to vote for a third-party candidate rather than some other option, the candidate you vote for is unlikely to win, so your vote is wasted." It is that "when you choose to vote for a third-party candidate, rather than some other option, the most likely impact of that decision is to increase the probability that the major party candidate that you are most opposed to wins rather than the major party candidate that you are least opposed to."

    113. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Saying that "dependency on the system" is a bad thing presupposes some better alternative.

      br/>
      So, point blank, would the world be better for me (a person in a wheel chair) if ADA (regulation) didn't exist?

    114. Re:A Wasted Vote... by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Helping people in need, particularly when that help is at a distance from the needy person, causes many problems. Frauds of all sorts emerge. Some people even destroy their own possessions, just for the fun of the destruction, knowing that Uncle Sam will buy them newer stuff. Some people deliberately remain needy, just so that they don't have to work.

      Charity is best applied locally by people who can watch the recipients and cut off aid if the poor turn out to be slackers.

      Government-forced charity is evil in all its aspects:

      • stealing from the productive
      • giving to the shiftless, destructive, and dishonest
      • providing an undeserved income to government employees

      It is inherently that way, and cannot be fixed.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    115. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you like Obama for ending the war in Iraq (something I support as well), then you are something of a twit. Firstly, there isn't really an end to the "war in Iraq" so much as a (major) reduction in forces, but more importantly Obama did nothing to end it. It was ended by a treaty signed by his predecessor. In fact, Obama tried to get the deadline for troop withdrawal extended, but the Iraqi government wouldn't have it. The Obama administration spent most of 2011 trying to get the new Iraqi government to agree to an extension, but they strangely wouldn't issue a "request" that we stay.

      So yeah, something we support (not having troops in Iraq) happened while Obama was president. But he didn't share any of the responsibility for making that happen. Quite the opposite in point of fact.

    116. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      Nice rant. Completely wasted, but nice rant nonetheless. Anybody who trots out Somalia as an example of libertarianism is not going to be someone who can be argued with.

    117. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      . The reason modern successful democracies are successful is because they strive to provide equal opportunity to all their citizens. Only mechanisms for that are rapidly unraveling in the US.

      I'd like to hear more about this..... what mechanism of redistribution are you speaking of, and how is it rapidly unraveling in the US?

    118. Re:A Wasted Vote... by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      In the United States in 2011, 15.1% of the population was officially under the poverty line (wikipedia). That's what most people consider to be "in need". Keep in mind that a person at the US poverty line is at the global 85% wealth level. Obviously there is some fraud and deception going on here.

      However, you missed the point. As the official definition of poverty becomes richer, there is increased incentive to appear poor, so as to score more swag, and decreased incentive to produce for your own life. The central fallacy is that there is no loss in societal wealth as each incremental person leaves the workforce, and thus that there will be no consequences when a massive portion of society doesn't work.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    119. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      Eah, sure. Frauds, embezzlement, blah blah. In short, it's the variation of the same old: "I've got mine, now GTFO".

      The number of social parasites (i.e. who don't work purposefully) is small (about 1-2%, max), so they are non-issue. And charity simply doesn't scale for anything non-trivial.

    120. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      Only a strong government can limit and oppose the power of strong corporations.

      And you also need to indoctrinate all children in grade-school and religious studies in values supportive of a libertarian society. They would need to literally be terribly ashamed to behave badly. If they don't, laws won't be enough to keep them in check.

      Those are the holes in the libertarian philosophy.

      Only a strong government can be bought by corporations to funnel money into corporate coffers and/or regulate their competitors out of existence. (they even have a name for this, it is called crony capitalism) Do you really think that the US government opposes the power of strong corporations? (hint: where did all of the Obama administration higher-ups work before taking their jobs at the White House?)

      Also, on what planet do you associate libertarians with religious studies? They have a high percentage of atheists running about at libertarian party events.

      Libertarians don't believe in an absence of laws or police, just in a massive reduction of those things that are illegal. Basically, if there is no victim, there is no crime. That alone would free about half of the people incarcerated in this country. It would free up a lot of prison space for those rapists, murderers, child molesters and muggers that have to be released early to alleviate overcrowding. Also, police would have more time to stop child molesters if they weren't running sting operations for prostitution and pot smokers. You do want child molesters stopped don't you? Why do you hate children?

    121. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Cyberax · · Score: 1
      Dude. Have you ever been poor or lived with poor people? I have.

      Most of poor work much more than you do, but receive much less. That might be because they are not as lucky or smart as you.

      there is increased incentive to appear poor, so as to score more swag

      Yeah, that's why WSJ called them "lucky duckies". They're so lucky, they don't pay federal income taxes!
      Most of time, however, poor people are glad to earn more and pay more taxes. Mostly because the amount of "swag" is minuscule. Arguably, the main "swag" is Medicaid (which is means-tested).

      The central fallacy is that there is no loss in societal wealth as each incremental person leaves the workforce, and thus that there will be no consequences when a massive portion of society doesn't work.

      And the main fallacy is that a person _chooses_ to leave the workforce. That's almost NEVER is the case, especially for poor people.

    122. Re:A Wasted Vote... by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Goldman-Sachs is a known bad player, but generally companies need customers who are robust and enthusiastic enough to buy their product. Regulation is not what keeps people safe, it's the self-interest of rational providers of goods, who don't want to be murdered by the gun-toting man they've poisoned/defrauded/crushed/electrocuted/burned etc.. Regulations are superfluous, and provide a way for the meddling and dishonest to force their will on others. Mayor Bloomberg is a flaming example.

      Help! I'm being attacked by a Big Gulp (TM).

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    123. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      1) Healthcare, especially for children (Medicaid).
      2) Rising cost of higher education (Pell grants are under attack, as well).
      3) Decreasing upwards mobility (income for poor people has actually declined last 15 years)
      ...

    124. Re:A Wasted Vote... by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Gary Johnson's message wasn't selling. "Power brokers" are superfluous if the message is strong enough and people are not incapable of seeing its virtues. Perot pulled 19% of the popular vote with a vacuous message and a waffling campaign, and for sure no "power brokers" favored him. Imagine what he could have done if he had had a coherent, strong, sensible program and a pleasing personal appearance.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    125. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      You don't have to look too terribly far to know that this isn't true. Obama ran primarily as the "anti-Bush". He has failed to distinguish himself from Bush in any significant way that I can see. Well, other than being a competent speechmaker.

      Let's take a look at the things that Bush sucked on. Hate the tax cuts? Obama did't change that. Hate the Patriot Act? Obama doubled down on that one. Plus added in the latest defense authorization act. Yikes. Guantanamo? Nope, didn't change that. What about warrantless wiretaps? no. Killing people in other countries? Nope. Actually worse than Bush on that. Extra-constitutionality? Please. How about inventing the term "kinetic military action" to not only end run the constitution on making war, but also avoid the war powers act.

      Let's keep going. How about secret government kill lists? Remember Bush's "kill or capture" deck of cards? Obama one-upped him on that and claims the right to issue a death warrant for american citizens based solely on his say-so that they are "enemy combatants". He did come up with the fancy euphemism of calling it a "disposition matrix" though.

      But Obama is way better on domestic policy, right? He did healthcare reform.... Bush would never have done that. Oh, except that the biggest expansion of government benefits in the last 40 years prior to Obama's healthcare reform was... Bush's expansion of medicare (the prescription drug benefit). So yeah.... way different there. Oh, and Romney-care was supposedly a model for Obama-care. So I can see how you'd think they are so massively different.

      Heck, Obama has been worse on immigration than Bush was.... deporting far more people than Bush ever did. Bush even spent some political capital trying to get an immigration reform package that would have allowed millions more immigrants from south of the border. Didn't go anywhere, but at least he put it forward. More than you can say for Obama. But on a "republicans are different than democrats" level, neither did anything productive, so effectively the same.

      Look, keep telling yourself that Romney is so much, so very muchly much worse than Obama if it makes you feel better. But there's not a dimes worth of difference between the big government republicans and the big government democrats. Unless you are one of the big companies that support them. Then I suppose it makes a difference. I'm sure Goldman Sachs would see a very different world under Romney than Obama. Just like Halliburton saw a different world under Obama than Bush. The rest of us.... not so much.

    126. Re:A Wasted Vote... by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Parties do tend to straddle the middle, but consistent pressure will move the center, and that's what's been going on for over a century as the West drifts left. Since leftists own the schools, that's not likely to change.

      However, consistent victories by politicians promoting a particular ideology will cause other politicians to imitate that message: they want to get elected, too. In that manner the center can be moved. Third party candidates in most situations cannot change the trend, it must be done within the existing structure and that means making one of the existing parties right-minded and successful.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    127. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      Once any third party starts to become a threat, the Big 2 will just start stealing planks out of their platform, divide up their issues, and get those voters.

      This is demonstrably true. Just look at the last two years for your examples. People got all torqued off about how the feds were spending us into oblivion and started "tea party" protests. The healthcare debate through gasoline on that fire and a movement was born. It took about 5 minutes for the republican establishment to race down there and try to jump in front of the parade.

      Then we had the Occupy movements. It never had the mass of the tea party, but there was still plenty of "quit screwing up my country" energy going on. The Dems didn't just parade jump, they tried desperately to make it the counter-revolution to the tea party they desperately needed.

      In the end we just got more team red and team blue activists.

    128. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      Thanks for that. One of my pet peeves.

      Here's a fun video of Obama supporters condemning Romney for his horrible positions. Only to backtrack when they learn that they are actually Obama policies that have been implemented, not Romney proposals for the future. Youtube has links to back up all of the policies for those who doubt that Obama would have a secret kill list.

    129. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      Ok, now I'm confused. We just expanded public healthcare funding and are on a path to single payer when this cobbled-together mess of mandates collapses. Rising cost of education is hardly a redistribution program, but perhaps you refer to a broader path to opportunity... that I can understand and support. But the rising cost of higher education is largely due to all of the money being thrown at it from the government in the form of grants (a little) and much more so loan guarantees. And even with all of that you can still pay for your college education waiting tables - just not at a top tier university. Or a second tier university.

      Don't know much about decreasing upward mobility.... people still move between brackets plenty - up and down. Well, down mostly of late, but still. But more than half of the bottom 10% of the poor are in that position because they've been in the prison system. And a majority of those were in prison for drugs. Still not a redistribution problem, but it is a government created problem. I'd prefer that we leave it to AA and others to help people sort out their drug problems, rather than using guns to force them to stop using drugs. But hey, that's just me. If we had a live-and-let-live policy on victimless crimes, that's 5% of the population that would have every opportunity to get their act together and join the middle class ... or better. But neither of our two major parties support anything at all to do with fixing that problem. And cutting checks to support them won't help either.

    130. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Glock27 · · Score: 1

      A bugger disgrace than George Bush?

      A bigger disgrace than Richard Nixon?

      How exactly is he more disgraceful than those criminals?

      Can you actually explain that?

      Sorry it took a bit to respond, I wish I had sooner so more could see it.

      First off, GWB wasn't a criminal in any sense of the word. He may have attacked Iraq (along with quite a few other nations) based on faulty intel, but it was intel that was widely believed at the time.

      As to Nixon, he was a criminal by virtue of Watergate.

      However, 0 trumps both of them easily:

      • Fast and Furious, which 0 certainly knew of and approved as an anti-gun tactic, has killed hundreds of people, mainly in Mexico. It was a criminally stupid and negligent operation.
      • The Benghazi coverup is worse than Watergate...and no one died as a result of Watergate.
      • 0's hapless policies have run up enormous debt, far beyond anything rational. It is potentially an existential threat to America.
      • 0's anti-capitalist bias has resulted in policies and regulations that have stifled business growth and economic prosperity.
      • 0's apology tour around the world was something no previous President would have done - they all respected the office and our country too much.
      • 0 has had a lackadaisical approach to his duties, working short hours and spending plenty of time in frivolous pursuits like golf and celebrity-schmoozing.
      • 0 and his wife have partied and vacationed excessively at great taxpayer expense, while the average American has had to cut back during tough times.

      I could go on, but that's certainly enough. I also expect eventually the truth will come out regarding 0's shady social security number, and the reason he's spent millions hiding his school records and admission forms.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    131. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Cyberax · · Score: 1
      Medicaid is under attack right now, especially its use for childcare.

      But the rising cost of higher education is largely due to all of the money being thrown at it from the government in the form of grants (a little) and much more so loan guarantees.

      I don't really care to discuss it right now, but something should be done here.

      Don't know much about decreasing upward mobility.... people still move between brackets plenty - up and down.

      Nope. The American Dream is dying. It used to be that a hard-working average citizen could earn enough for comfortable middle-class life and easy retirement. Not anymore. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socio-economic_mobility_in_the_United_States and http://www.brendan-nyhan.com/blog/2005/01/the_economist_o.html for stats, for example. Point is, it's not getting any better.

    132. Re:A Wasted Vote... by nbauman · · Score: 1

      First of all, Somalia is NOT libertarian in any way.

      A free market is like one of those transuranium elements that lasts a fraction of a second before it self-explodes and becomes something else.

      That's what happens in countries like Somalia. Take away the government, and armed gangs fill in the vacuum.

      And if you want an example of a libertarian government, I suggest you look at the United States of American until maybe the mid 1800s.

      A libertarian government with slavery?

    133. Re:A Wasted Vote... by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      The distinction you are trying to make doesn't really apply to California.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    134. Re:A Wasted Vote... by flyneye · · Score: 1

      Like I said, I'm still waiting for a clearly second party to appear, say, in a debate, for example. So far, the one party system is the only one that gets free public debates broadcast and doesn't dare include anyone else since Perot kept them looking like clowns to a large percentage of the voters.
      Since then, the whining heads excuse their overlords from debating outside their one party system by calling other political parties, "spoilers". You know, if someone came on and pointed out their crimes, lies and agendas in contrast to the price paid by the people, or God forbid, contradict them, well that would SPOIL their plans. I think it is a crime, in a time of national crisis, to purposely withold the views of those who would offer their plan as superior to the reigning drama queens current crap. Really, a crime, right up there with treason. That's like an ambulance service putting up road blocks in order to keep other ambulance services from serving the city. It's a monopoly and no damn CNN coverage on off prime hours can make it anywhere near to a national debate of presidential candidates. People who can manage to fight their way on to the ballots in between 8 and 48 states. Those people should be heard on an equal platform with the Repubmocrats. They should be FORCED to comply with this, but then look who's legislating...the Mouseketeers!

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    135. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Every one of your "faults" with Obama is a blatant lie.

      Fast and Furious was documented to be a local initiative. And your body count is can not be substantiated.

      There was no Benghazi coverup.

      Obama's financial policies are moderate, and would not produce debt if it wasn't for the traitors who took the Norquist pledge to harm America by refusing to raise taxes when necessary.

      Obama is not by any means anti-capitalist.

      There was no apology tour.

      Obama has taken less vacations in his almost 4 years than Bush averaged for every 2 years.

      Again, that is bullshit.

      Come back when you can play with the grown ups, and are capable of making truthful statements or arguments that are even remotely valid. I have plenty of gripes against Obama, but they are founded in reality.

    136. Re:A Wasted Vote... by cptBongo · · Score: 1

      It was a (rather funny) joke, you miserable clod.

    137. Re:A Wasted Vote... by ivrogne · · Score: 1

      And what about the reinforced helplessness, increased dependency on the almighty state? That breeds the kind of people unable to wipe their own ass. American prosperity was not built by entitled whiny bitches who expect free obamaphone every week, was it?

      If there's still an ounce of humanity left in you, you would probably like to read an article by Jeremiah Goulka called "Confessions of a Former Republican".

    138. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the nth fucking time, Gary Johnson was a Republican when he was governor. He became the Libertarian Party candidate because he lost the Republican presidential primary.

      He basically governed as a Libertarian.

    139. Re:A Wasted Vote... by strikethree · · Score: 1

      And there is that huge so called embassy for 5500 people, full of mercenaries. That pulling out is in name only.

      You have no idea what you are talking about. There are some people there for security and I guess you could call those security folks mercenaries... but I am unsure why you would want to label them that way. The majority of people there do not carry arms nor do they have a combat mission.

      To be honest, a large chunk of the people there are translators. I know because I have been talking with them as they are traveling through my location.

      Just stop with the hate, rational or irrational.

      --
      "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
    140. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Glock27 · · Score: 1

      Every one of your "faults" with Obama is a blatant lie.

      BS. Brainwashed much?

      Fast and Furious was documented to be a local initiative. And your body count is can not be substantiated.

      Yeah, it was such a "local initiative" that it's been directly linked to Eric Holder, and 0 has invoked executive privilege to protect his sorry behind. Note that he criticized GWB on using executive privilege, just another example of the endless hypocrisy he exhibits.

      The Univision documentary covered the carnage that this program has caused in Mexico.

      There was no Benghazi coverup.

      "These are not the droids you're looking for..." Right. To those of us with functioning intellects, it's clear the 0 attempted to blame Benghazi on an "internet video", and for two weeks refused to admit terrorist involvement - even though they knew about it the day it happened. Likewise, it was described as a "spontaneous riot", even though they knew there was no riot. There was a live video feed to the White House straight from Bhengazi.

      I suspect 0 is hoping not to be re-elected tonight, as the heat regarding Bhengazi will be blazing.

      Obama's financial policies are moderate, and would not produce debt if it wasn't for the traitors who took the Norquist pledge to harm America by refusing to raise taxes when necessary.

      Wow, total BS again. Policies that vastly expand the national debt aren't "moderate". As to your tax argument, even 0 had to admit that ending the Bush tax policies would kill whatever anemic recovery that was underway.

      Obama is not by any means anti-capitalist.

      He certainly is, and his track record of killing businesses, excessive regulation, and wealth redistribution speaks for itself.

      There was no apology tour.

      You just love revisionist history, don't you? Those of us with extensive collections of 0 pics where he's bowing to foreign leaders know otherwise. His rhetoric (in Egypt for instance) has been clearly apologetic for his perceived failings of American policy.

      Obama has taken less vacations in his almost 4 years than Bush averaged for every 2 years.

      Again, that is bullshit.

      I guess you're not counting golf, or the numerous expensive vacations Moochelle has taken on her own.

      You're also not considering that GWB actually worked on many of his "vacations" to his ranch or Camp David.

      Come back when you can play with the grown ups, and are capable of making truthful statements or arguments that are even remotely valid. I have plenty of gripes against Obama, but they are founded in reality.

      You should try comedy, your attempts at factual argument are full of fail.

      R&R look to be doing even better than expected...have a fun night! ;-)

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    141. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Back your shit up or shut the fuck up,

      I am sick and tired of listening to retards like you.

      Prove your assertion.

    142. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was all ready to say "Fuck mainstream, I'm voting for a third party!" Until I looked at the third party candidates and realised I disagreed with them just as much as I disagreed with Obama and Romney.

    143. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Seeteufel · · Score: 1

      The current system favours extremists in swing states and discriminates minority parties beyond the duopoly.

    144. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Seeteufel · · Score: 1

      A solution may be regional government, meaning 4-5 regional governments of coherent states without secessionist aims. Simply because single states are currently too small while Washington is considered too powerful.

    145. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Seeteufel · · Score: 1

      Simply organise regional governments.

    146. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Glock27 · · Score: 1

      Just a little research on your part would have done the trick.

      However, we're now stuck with 0 for four more long years. I hope you enjoy the disaster that you and the other mindless leeches have ensured.

      A democracy is always temporary in nature; it simply cannot exist as a permanent form of government. A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates who promise the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that every democracy will finally collapse due to loose fiscal policy, which is always followed by a dictatorship. The average age of the world's greatest civilizations from the beginning of history has been about 200 years. During those 200 years, these nations always progressed through the following sequence:

      From bondage to spiritual faith;
      From spiritual faith to great courage;
      From courage to liberty;
      From liberty to abundance;
      From abundance to complacency;
      From complacency to apathy;
      From apathy to dependence;
      From dependence back into bondage.

      Time to focus on thriving personally.

      Eventually we'll see if patriotic Americans can somehow right the ship of state, or if in fact the great American Experiment has failed forever. I'm concerned that things will get so bad that the Tree of Liberty will receive plenty of its preferred fertilizer before things look up - and that is likely a best-case scenario.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    147. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      I have done quite a bit of research actually.

      And the facts do not bear out your feeble assertions.

      Every reliable source I have seen refutes and proves them wrong.

      The only thing supporting your assertions are the baseless rantings of the conservative echo chamber.

    148. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      You want to see the tree of liberty watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots?

      I have news for you, I am a patriot, and you are a tyrrant.

      I am a proud gun toting American liberal and I will kill to defend my nation from people like you who would see it deconstructed.

    149. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Glock27 · · Score: 1

      I have done quite a bit of research actually.

      Right...

      http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/jun/20/obama-asserts-executive-privilege-over-ff-docs/?page=all
      http://abcnews.go.com/ABC_Univision/News/page/univision-news-investigation-operation-fast-furious-weapons-revealed-17352963
      http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2012/11/the-benghazi-drip-drip-drip/
      http://www.examiner.com/article/retired-officer-obama-watched-benghazi-attack-happen-sources-say
      http://dailycaller.com/2012/08/20/more-than-500-economists-5-nobel-laureates-back-romneys-economic-strategy/
      http://money.cnn.com/2012/06/25/news/economy/obama-congress-grades/index.htm
      http://communities.washingtontimes.com/neighborhood/tygrrrr-express/2012/oct/2/real-obama-economic-policy-record/
      http://www.ijreview.com/2012/07/10891-top-4-most-wasteful-michelle-obama-vacations/ http://obamagolfcounter.com/

      Note the many right-wing sources like CNN and ABC News.

      I saved the apology tour for last, as I found several quotes you'll no doubt enjoy:

      - At a Summit of the Americas, Obama regretted how “at times we sought to dictate our terms.” In an op-ed about policy toward the America’s, Obama declared: “Too often, the United States has not pursued and sustained engagement with our neighbors.”

      - Speaking to the Turkish parliament, Obama rationalized: “The United States is still working through some of our own darker periods in our history.”

      - Addressing CIA employees about an administration report which castigated the use of enhanced interrogation techniques against terrorist suspects, the President urged: “Don’t be discouraged that we have to acknowledge potentially we’ve made some mistakes.”

      - In a speech, Obama denounced the techniques used in the war on terror: “Instead of strategically applying our power and our principles, too often we set those principles aside as luxuries that we could no longer afford. And during this season of fear, too many of us – Democrats and Republicans, politicians, journalists, and citizens – fell silent.”

      - In that same address at the National Archives, he went into full apology mode over Guantanamo: “There is also no question that Guantanamo set back the moral authority that is America’s strongest currency in the world. Instead of building a durable framework for the struggle against Al Qaeda that drew upon our deeply held values and traditions, our government was defending positions that undermined the rule of law.”

      0's rhetoric and actions have weakened America considerably, which is reflected in the actions of the PRC and Russia in particular.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    150. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Glock27 · · Score: 1

      You want to see the tree of liberty watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots?

      I don't want it, but it's looking more and more likely...largely due to tools like yourself.

      I have news for you, I am a patriot, and you are a tyrrant.

      Those words do not mean what you think they mean. If I've ever seen a politician with tyrannical tendencies, it is 0.

      I am a proud gun toting American liberal and I will kill to defend my nation from people like you who would see it deconstructed.

      LOL! "Your" nation isn't America...you and your kind are the reason for the saying "take back America".

      I have a feeling you're going to get an education over the next few years. You need one desperately.

      It only takes 20 years for a liberal to become a conservative without changing a single idea.
      - Robert Anton Wilson

      In the meantime, my side is much better equipped and trained. ;-)

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    151. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Conservatism is just a means to an end. And that end is overthrowing the liberty and prosperity of the American people in order to restore the old way of doing things. A plutocratic class with absolute economic, political and theocratic control over the a disempowerd class of serfs.

      The liberals who value justice, personal liberty and prosperity will always oppose you. And we are more numerous and better armed and trained than you would suspect.

    152. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Glock27 · · Score: 1

      Conservatism is just a means to an end. And that end is overthrowing the liberty and prosperity of the American people in order to restore the old way of doing things. A plutocratic class with absolute economic, political and theocratic control over the a disempowerd class of serfs.

      That is of course complete BS. Under 0 poverty has skyrocketed. We now have far more people dependent on government than when he took office. The liberals have worked for decades to keep minorities under their thumb with handouts, thereby buying their votes. Talk about serfs...still on the plantation.

      The liberals who value justice, personal liberty and prosperity will always oppose you.

      "Justice" is not taking stuff away from those who have it and giving it to others. That is called "theft".

      "Personal liberty" is antithetical to big, nanny-state government. We who truly love liberty will stop at nothing to preserve it. Modern "liberals" (actually progressives) hate "personal liberty". Judging from your words, you are the exact definition of a "useful idiot".

      "Prosperity" is what happens when the government gets out of the way and lets entrepreneurs create and innovate. 0's policies of high taxation and overregulation won't permit the kind of prosperity we need. Not to mention his stupid and shortsighted energy policies.

      And we are more numerous and better armed and trained than you would suspect.

      LOL! As they say, hope for the best, and plan for the worst. Just remember a lot of country boys know how to survive under rough conditions...and man can they shoot. ;-)

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    153. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      You are accusing me of being what you are. A useful idiot is all you are. Your empty posturing is infantile.

      Your thinly veiled threats of violence are foolish.

      You assume I am not willing and able to fight back just as hard or harder.

    154. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      I was a libertarian.. I'm just telling you what is required for a libertarian society to make it more than about 2 weeks before collapsing into a corporate oligarchy.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    155. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Glock27 · · Score: 1

      You are accusing me of being what you are. A useful idiot is all you are. Your empty posturing is infantile.

      Your thinly veiled threats of violence are foolish.

      You assume I am not willing and able to fight back just as hard or harder.

      LOL! You are good for some amusement...and that's about all.

      Good luck on gaining some true understanding about the real world someday.

      I'll let you have the last word, as you seem determined in that department, if nothing else.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    156. Re:A Wasted Vote... by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      The current system favours extremists in swing states and discriminates minority parties beyond the duopoly.

      That was nonresponsive to the post it is offered in response to, which stated: The US election system isn't set entirely (or even mostly) by the Constitution, as many of the key details are set in statute and regulation. So, even if we assume that the problem is that the election system is broken, you need to make a much more specific argument about how it is broken and what structure should replace it to support the contention that it is broken in a manner which requires a Constitutional fix rather than a less-drastic remedy.

      What you've offered is merely an assertion about the effects of the current system, which doesn't even attempt to link those effects to a particular source, whether in the Constitution or otherwise. So, even if we accept your characterization without question, it doesn't offer any reason to think that Constitutional change is necessary. Since Constitutional change is both the highest-risk course of change (hardest to fix if implemented wrong), and the hardest to implement at all, its really not a strategy you want to adopt without a clear reason to believe that it is necessary to make the change in the Constitution, rather than simply in state and/or federal election regulations and/or statutes.

    157. Re:A Wasted Vote... by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      The distinction you are trying to make doesn't really apply to California.

      It does in Presidential elections; it doesn't in the "general election" for other California partisan elections which are governed by the the new rules under which what is called primary elections" are actually open majority-rule general elections with no preceding party primary and "general elections" are actually runoffs for the top-two in the (normally expected) case where the primary doesn't result in a majority winner (although, in that system, doing anything but voting for a candidate from the top two in the general election isn't a wasted vote, but actually a legal non-vote.) But it does in the "primary election" for those new-system elections.

  2. Tomorrow night? by tooyoung · · Score: 3, Informative

    Won't the election be over on Tuesday?

    1. Re:Tomorrow night? by aaron44126 · · Score: 1

      For most of the world it's already Monday, so tomorrow is Tuesday. :-)

    2. Re:Tomorrow night? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Won't the election be over on Tuesday?

      Yes, except in Florida.

    3. Re:Tomorrow night? by artor3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But for those people, the election won't end until Wednesday!

    4. Re:Tomorrow night? by hutsell · · Score: 2

      Won't the election be over on Tuesday?

      The President is elected by the Electoral College; the Electors, chosen by the voters tomorrow, meet in their own state capitals on the Monday after the second Wednesday in December (December 12, for this year) and cast their votes on separate ballots, one for the President and the other for the Vice President. Unofficially, we'll know tomorrow night. If it's an unusually close or controversial election, then we'll know after December 12, 2012.

      --
      Yesterday's Weirdness is Tomorrow's Reason Why
    5. Re:Tomorrow night? by Ironchew · · Score: 1

      Most of the world isn't participating in the U.S. elections*.

      *Unless they're trans-national corporations, courtesy of the Citizens United decision.

    6. Re:Tomorrow night? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For 100% of the nation whose election, being discussed here, is on Tuesday, it is Sunday for at least 4 more hours. It's fine to talk from your own time zone perspective on many topics, but an American election should probably be discussed from the time zone perspective of America.

    7. Re:Tomorrow night? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Right. And it wasn't Monday in most of the world anyway, when OP wrote his piece.

      So it's just wrong. Tomorrow is not election day. Tuesday is.

    8. Re:Tomorrow night? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "... the Electors, chosen by the voters tomorrow, meet in their own state capitals..."

      No, even though that is the way it is described in Wikipedia, that is incorrect.

      The people vote for who they want to win the election. Not for Electors. The Electors then decide who THEY will vote for. They are not bound by the choices of the people. Regardless, the people vote for political candidates, not electors.

    9. Re:Tomorrow night? by chill · · Score: 1

      Actually several States have passed laws requiring Electors to cast their votes for whomever wins the popular vote in their State. Thus several ARE bound by the choices of the people. In theory, anyway.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    10. Re:Tomorrow night? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      I should have qualified that. There is no Federal requirement that electors vote any particular way. But as far as I know there is nothing keeping states from passing such legislation.

    11. Re:Tomorrow night? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, the election is on Tuesday, but by late tomorrow all of the voting machines will have been rigged.

    12. Re:Tomorrow night? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, election is Tuesday Nov. 6th.

    13. Re:Tomorrow night? by wonkavader · · Score: 1

      Read the constitution. While it doesn't say "you can't tell them how to vote" it does say that the electors annouce their decision. So the implication is that you can't tell them how to vote. You can appoint them any way you like, though, so there's no constitutional demand to hold an election for president. The govenor of Ohio can simply appoint a bunch of Republicans as electors, if the Ohio constitution/legislature allows it. But the govenor of Ohio shouldn't be able to tell them how to vote. But he does. Which is probably unconstitutional.

    14. Re:Tomorrow night? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 2

      "Read the constitution. While it doesn't say "you can't tell them how to vote" it does say that the electors annouce their decision."

      I am presuming that you are basing your argument on the words "their decision". But there are many kinds of decisions... like "Vote the way the people of this state tell you, or walk." That is a decision, of a sort. It is also coercion, of a sort. But not the sort wherein someone points a gun at your head. There is a quantitative and qualitative difference.

      "The govenor of Ohio can simply appoint a bunch of Republicans as electors, if the Ohio constitution/legislature allows it. But the govenor of Ohio shouldn't be able to tell them how to vote. But he does. Which is probably unconstitutional."

      No, it's not unconstitutional. Each state (read that Constitution again) can decide for itself -- as long as it does not break other Federal laws -- how the people vote in Federal elections. Also how their electors will "decide" their votes.

      But that also presumes that the people of Ohio both know of these practices, and approve of them. If not, they they are supposed to -- at the state level -- change it. In my state, we got fed up with the "2 party only" system of voting that was in force, and changed it. Several times. I won't go into detail because I don't publish my home state on Slashdot.

    15. Re:Tomorrow night? by khallow · · Score: 1

      *Unless they're trans-national corporations, courtesy of the Citizens United decision.

      Following constitutional law can be such a pain. But whatever individuals can do, groups should be able to do as well. Else their rights are being violated. That's the core of the Citizens United ruling.

    16. Re:Tomorrow night? by Whiteox · · Score: 1

      Depends on what you call 'participation'?
      Rumour has it that US Foriegn and even domestic policy has an effect on the 'rest of the world'.

      --
      Don't be apathetic. Procrastinate!
    17. Re:Tomorrow night? by WhiteDragon · · Score: 1

      Following constitutional law can be such a pain. But whatever individuals can do, groups should be able to do as well. Else their rights are being violated. That's the core of the Citizens United ruling.

      I've read some fiction where corporations have exactly the same rights as citizens (i.e. right to vote, etc.) and if you joined a corporation or nation, you had to revoke your citizenship in any previous entity.

      --
      Did you mount a military-grade, variable-focus MASER on an unlicensed artificial intelligence?
    18. Re:Tomorrow night? by khallow · · Score: 1

      And I've read fiction that had space whales. So what?

    19. Re:Tomorrow night? by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      The people vote for who they want to win the election. Not for Electors. The Electors then decide who THEY will vote for. They are not bound by the choices of the people. Regardless, the people vote for political candidates, not electors.

      Actually, the people vote for electors (because that who actually gets elected based on the popular vote), its just that every state has adopted a procedure under which the names of the candidates for whom the electors are pledged, rather than the names of the electors actually standing for election, are printed on the ballot, which makes people think they are voting for a Presidential/Vice Presidential ticket rather than a slate of electors.

    20. Re:Tomorrow night? by hutsell · · Score: 1

      The people vote for who they want to win the election. Not for Electors. The Electors then decide who THEY will vote for. They are not bound by the choices of the people. Regardless, the people vote for political candidates, not electors.

      Actually, the people vote for electors (because that's who actually gets elected based on the popular vote), its just that every state has adopted a procedure under which the names of the candidates for whom the electors are pledged, rather than the names of the electors actually standing for election, are printed on the ballot, which makes people think they are voting for a Presidential/Vice Presidential ticket rather than a slate of electors.

      Thanks. My clause: chosen by the voters tomorrow is approximately equivalent to your: Actually, the people vote for electors [...] people think they are voting for a Presidential / Vice Presidential ticket rather than a slate of electors. My reply is meant only to clarify my position about the subject being discussed in this thread; not to convince others they're wrong. Although it's a topic that should be discussed that would hopefully conclude with a definitive solution, in hindsight my original reply should have left out any reference to the idea, since all of the complications resulting from it are tangential to my response to simply answer the original question: Won't the election be over on Tuesday?

      However, all of this is apparently mute, since it appears the original question was really referring to a technicality, a small error TFS made (since edited with a correction) about the election being tomorrow (at the time of the post) and not about clarifying a reference to the popular vote (originally, the election was over) on Tuesday night.

      --
      Yesterday's Weirdness is Tomorrow's Reason Why
    21. Re:Tomorrow night? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      You're both wrong, from both a factual and procedural point of view.

      PEOPLE vote for CANDIDATES. The electors then take those votes and decide how to place their own votes.

      People do not vote for electors. That's just wrong. That's not the way it works.

  3. Who cares? by gelfling · · Score: 0

    Disgruntled dead enders for the most part. Between the stoners, anarchists, angry trustafarians, millionaire communists and all the rest, who gives a shit.

    1. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The millions of people who don't give a fuck about the main two parties and their destructive partnership. Keep being that uninformed voter voting for the same people each election only to ask why hasn't it gotten better.

    2. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Disgruntled dead enders for the most part. Between the stoners, anarchists, angry trustafarians, millionaire communists and all the rest, who gives a shit.

      You sir, are a complete douche-bag troll. At the very least, 10 percent of the nation has become aware of their surroundings in the past few years. It is people like you who hold all of us back by promoting a system of corruption. Most of those "stoners" and "anarchists" that you reference have magnitudes of order more to offer than yourself when it comes to intelligent assessments of our current system and ideas to improve it.

    3. Re:Who cares? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0

      They have deliberately twisted things so that you don't care.

      So... that makes you not care? That makes you not just a sheep, but a manipulated, castrated sheep.

      Anybody for some mutton?

    4. Re:Who cares? by ChunderDownunder · · Score: 1

      Well in my country (Australia) we have preferential voting. Every vote for a minority 'counts' in that each electorate ultimately selects which of the 2 candidates is the least bad.

      2 years ago an interesting phenomenon occurred. Loosely aligned to the two party system Labor (Democrats), Liberal/National (Republicans) - our two main political groups both 'lost' the election. A deal was done with a handful of independents and a Green to form a minority government. Ever since, the ones forming an opposition have whined constantly about being held hostage to a few despite a majority of voters too rejecting their agenda and having unveiled only 1 policy (on maternity leave) in that time.

      Some of us would hope the status quo remains and neither achieves a majority at any subsequent election.

    5. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anybody for some mutton?

      Salad's got nuttin' on this mutton!

    6. Re:Who cares? by Whiteox · · Score: 1

      I agree. Although I'm apolitical as far as Oz government is concerned, I found myself as a campaign manager of a Liberal Democratic candidate for the last Fed election, an ACT senate election, a by-election and now, for a different Nationalist style candidate for a minor QLD party. Strange that I could do that as even the minor parties are not too different from Liberal or Labour. The Liberals follow Rebublican norms and attitudes religiously, from the naysayings inclusive. I can hardly wait till late next year for our own election.

      --
      Don't be apathetic. Procrastinate!
  4. Easy answer by Nidi62 · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you're voting (or would, if you could) for other than the Democratic or Republican parties' candidates this year, what drives that decision?

    Easy: Romney wants to control your bedroom (marriage, abortion, etc), and Obama wants to control your bank account. Not to mention in the debates they both have either lied out of their asses or refused to provide real answers/details to any policy question.

    --
    The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    1. Re:Easy answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obama wants to control just your bank account? Could you explain all those ads that he's been running then especially the "lady parts" ads, and "voting is like virginity" ads, and not to forget that they've tied up with Fluke who can't afford $9/mo for birth control(that's cheaper than it is here in Canada). Seems to me that's more control than Romney.

    2. Re:Easy answer by Mspangler · · Score: 1

      Even easier;

      Obama refuses to enforce the law. (John Corzine is still not in jail, etc, etc)

      Romney wants to continue to monger war.

      Neither is fit for the job.

    3. Re:Easy answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oooh, sorry you lost the virginity argument when the Reagan ads were dug up of him going the same route.

      Except creepier.

      Oh well, nobody expected Republicans to have an appreciation for wit, notice the reaction to bayonets and horses. Or the recent "Voting is the Best Revenge" comment. We get it, whatever a Democrat says, Republicans will go into hysterics about it, while being blind to their own conduct. Too bad Jon Stewart has video.

      And you really can't touch Sandra Fluke since Rush Limbaugh decided to react to her with his bombastic vulgarity. Not that you didn't get the point of her position, but hey, great show turning things over to the one guy who could show how vile and despicable the right-wing really is. The inability of so many on the right to repudiate his conduct is even more telling.

    4. Re:Easy answer by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      I had to comment on this.

      And you really can't touch Sandra Fluke since Rush Limbaugh decided to react to her with his bombastic vulgarity. Not that you didn't get the point of her position, but hey, great show turning things over to the one guy who could show how vile and despicable the right-wing really is. The inability of so many on the right to repudiate his conduct is even more telling.

      Government out of my bedroom. Government pay for my birth control.

      Logical disconnect? Yeah, I'd say so. So, you want to be a responsible adult? Be a responsible adult.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    5. Re:Easy answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy: Romney wants to control your bedroom (marriage, abortion, etc), and Obama wants to control your bank account.

      I'd rather control my bank account. That way, when I feel like a screw, I can take a trip to a country that isn't filled with prudes. It's kind of hard to do that without a bank account.

  5. Re:ON DELETING POSTS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just FYI, the post which magically disappeared was a comment by me about how the last time Obama ran for election, the Repuglican Whitehouse pulled an "October Surprise" maneuver by getting their overseas flunky Saakashvili to start a war with Russia, so that McCain could quickly pounce on the event and scare voters to vote Republican (aka "Oh Noez! The Russians Are Coming! The Russians Are Coming! VOTE GOP!!!"

    My post was magically deleted, but all the rebuttals to it were kept preserved. That's pretty corrupt "moderation", if you ask me.

  6. Re:I'm voting AGAINST whitey by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

    Does Romney have any daughters? I know that he has five sons.

  7. It's a $1 one vote system... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... so unless you are extremely wealthy, good luck changing anything in DC.

  8. for some things, less is not more! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I am Greek - in my country (birthplace of Democracy... but you know that!), and in our last elections few months ago, we had about 35 parties to choose from, and from them there are 7 in the parliament (there is a 3% minimum of total votes requirement for geting there), and from those 7 parties 3 of them are forming the goverment... and still, for many citizens there is not a party that fully represents them.
    I believe that you have a much better Democracy in the USA than ours, but thats because you are better quality citizens - you should really check this multiple parties thing... it will make your Democracy even more better.

    1. Re:for some things, less is not more! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look how well it's working out for Greece... Oh, never mind, i'm sure your democracy will be great in your soon to be 3rd world country

    2. Re:for some things, less is not more! by leromarinvit · · Score: 1

      I believe that you have a much better Democracy in the USA than ours, but thats because you are better quality citizens

      Uh, what? Care to elaborate?

      --
      Proud member of the Ferengi Socialist Party.
    3. Re:for some things, less is not more! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "... you should really check this multiple parties thing... it will make your Democracy even more better."

      We already have multiple parties. Some of them have people in Congress. We just haven't had a President from any of them lately. But... although we are traditionally a country of 2 main parties, there is no actual law to that effect. And in fact the "Big 2" parties have not always been the same 2 parties. They can be, and have been, replaced.

      But the current "Big 2" have put in place barriers for others. If we want to have real change here, we MUST have a 3rd-party President. That will get the ball rolling.

    4. Re:for some things, less is not more! by OhANameWhatName · · Score: 1

      Representative voting is the way to go. Get 12% of the votes? Get 12% of the seats. This isn't the case in most westernized democracies because it makes it harder for the big parties to hold office. Unless by some stroke of genius, all of the party members for a particular party decide to live in the same suburb, there's almost always more big party voters in the division, electorate, area, region .. whatever you're particular country calls it.

      This is by design. The incumbant parties don't want to change the system, because it reduces their importance and ability to win. Wealthy people / businesses don't want this changed, because they're doing so well in the current climate.

      The thing that blows me away is how people can actually think that we live in democracies? This is the appearance of freedom, no more. And in the US, even the appearance has melted away. It's time to stop discussing the election, and time to start being disgusted with the election.

    5. Re:for some things, less is not more! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The same parties who have collectively managed to bankrupt your economy and lied to get you into the EU.

      You guys are even more fucked up than the USA is; tat takes real talent..

    6. Re:for some things, less is not more! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...but thats because you are better quality citizens...

      I may or may not agree with how this statement pertains to us as US citizens; however, you hit the nail on the head: quality government comes from quality people.

      Why are we wasting our time reforming government instead of ourselves?

    7. Re:for some things, less is not more! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some of them have people in Congress.

      Exactly one. There is a single Socialist in the Senate, who reliably votes with the Democrats. Every single member of the House is either a Democrat or a Republican.

      Focusing on the presidency is the wrong way. Instead, focus on local candidates. Local candidates can be helped by a small number of volunteers. Presidential candidates have to think in terms of large blocks of voters. Local candidates can think of individuals. Even Congress is too big. It takes two thousand volunteers or donors to create a competitive campaign. The third party candidates are lucky to make it into the hundreds. For local races, it's actually possible for a candidate to meet all potential voters. That doesn't work for federal or even state races.

      There's a lot of noise about how third party candidates scare the two party candidates. It's not true. As the Green candidate, Nader drew enough votes from Gore to throw the election to Bush in key states. Was the result that the Green agenda received more support from the Democrats? No, just the opposite. Kerry and Obama have been less supportive of environmental initiatives than Gore was. Obama has basically dropped the environment from his list of things that he wanted to do. Before his first term he listed health care, the environment, and immigration reform as his three big issues. Now he just lists immigration reform. Democrats have conceded environmental reform to the Greens and instead concentrate on candidates who can take votes from Republican leaning voters. Manchin in West Virginia is a classic case. He basically ran on the platform that he'd keep Obama from implementing environmental initiatives.

    8. Re:for some things, less is not more! by upside · · Score: 1

      Those barriers are called a first past the post electoral system. With proportional representation you'd have a completely different political scene. Same goes for electoral colleges - you should be able to elect your president directly if you want to call yourself a democracy.

      --
      I'm sorry if I haven't offended anyone
    9. Re:for some things, less is not more! by upside · · Score: 1

      "Most westernized democracies" - stop deluding yourself. It's basically the USA, the UK and Canada.

      Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proportional_representation

      --
      I'm sorry if I haven't offended anyone
    10. Re:for some things, less is not more! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We would need major structural changes for a multiple party system to work. Consider that Ross Perot won 19% of the popular vote, but not a single one of the 538 electoral votes. Our system of government was designed by people who thought owning slaves was God's will, and that women should not vote. If we had a zombie apocalypse, lost the electric grid, lost the Internet, and had to use horses again for transport, the US system would be fantastic.

      Getting a multiple party system to work is not even worth trying. A better goal is to abolish political parties. Require candidates to run on name only, do not list party on ballots, and require all contributions to go directly to candidates. The reason this is achievable is because people are already getting fed up with the gridlock - if we can get a significant percentage to virulently hate both the Republicans and Democrats, this just could make it off the ground.

    11. Re:for some things, less is not more! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      But at the same time, direct democracy has the historical distinction of being, repeatedly, the shortest-lived form of government ever... next to really bad Kings.

  9. Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Obama wants the top tax bracket to go up 3%. That's it. It was higher under Reagan.

    1. Re:Bollocks by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      He also is increasing taxes on the lower and middle class with the health care plan. First of all, I am against a national plan. I can't afford health insurance right now, and would rather do without as I don't feel it is right for everyone else to subsidize it and pay for it for me. What makes it worse is that I am penalized for not even being able to afford the insurance. I can't afford it so they are going to fine me for it?

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    2. Re:Bollocks by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      There are many more ways to reach into your wallet than just taxes (which you would know if you knew anything about the subject at all). And Obama has been pushing ALL of them.

      Get a clue.

    3. Re:Bollocks by lexman098 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I can't afford health insurance right now, and would rather do without as I don't feel it is right for everyone else to subsidize it and pay for it for me. What makes it worse is that I am penalized for not even being able to afford the insurance.

      This pretty much sums up the misinformation surrounding obamacare. Let me guess, you're too poor to afford insurance without your employer helping out, but still not poor enough to qualify for medicaid. The affordable care act was built with you in mind, my friend. It's actually less efficient for everyone else to let people like you go without insurance, so the affordable care act is going to (hopefully) make it cheaper for you to buy insurance from the exchange or at least require your employer to help out. You won't be "fined for being poor" unless you're ignorant ideology prevents you from taking advantage.

    4. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I can't afford health insurance right now, and would rather do without

      yeah, yeah, and then when your appendix explodes you're not going to just lie there and die, you're going to call 911 and get rushed to the hospital and rack up $50,000 in medical bills and declare personal bankruptcy and then everyone else has to pay for your care anyway.

    5. Re:Bollocks by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      I can't afford health insurance right now, and would rather do without

      yeah, yeah, and then when your appendix explodes you're not going to just lie there and die, you're going to call 911 and get rushed to the hospital and rack up $50,000 in medical bills and declare personal bankruptcy and then everyone else has to pay for your care anyway.

      No. If that happens, they can take all my assets, and go after my family's assets as well. It's called personal responsibility. If I make a choice, I should have to deal with the consequences.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    6. Re:Bollocks by Nidi62 · · Score: 0

      I can't afford health insurance right now, and would rather do without as I don't feel it is right for everyone else to subsidize it and pay for it for me. What makes it worse is that I am penalized for not even being able to afford the insurance.

      This pretty much sums up the misinformation surrounding obamacare. Let me guess, you're too poor to afford insurance without your employer helping out, but still not poor enough to qualify for medicaid.

      Nope. Work part time, live at home, and turn 26 this month. No company provides health care for part time employees, and with this shitty economy I can't get a full time job even with a Master's degree.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    7. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They can only go after your assets, not your family's. And if you can afford to pay $50000 for appendix operation through your own assets, why not pay for insurance?

    8. Re:Bollocks by Nimey · · Score: 1

      You're not penalized for that, idiot. The healthcare law specifies that if you're too poor to afford health insurance you will receive a tax credit towards paying for it.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    9. Re:Bollocks by glwtta · · Score: 1

      If you can't afford health insurance, I'm not exactly salivating over the prospect of collecting your vast assets.

      And what does your family have to do with anything? Were they responsible for your decisions?

      Like it or not, your choices do affect the rest of us in this case.

      --
      sic transit gloria mundi
    10. Re:Bollocks by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      If you can't afford health insurance, I'm not exactly salivating over the prospect of collecting your vast assets.

      Car, furniture, various electronics, some firearms that were given to me by relatives, etc. It all comes out to a decent amount of money, probably around 10k, but they aren't things that I can easily give up or turn into liquidity to purchase insurance, or anything else for that matter.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    11. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      We, as a society have chosen differently, namely that we don't see any reason to let you just die when there are numerous options available to resolve that.

      And we've also decided to split the difference by making you be responsible before the fact, and protecting you from that asset seizure afterwards.

      See, the numbers have been worked out, and as little as we value you, we'd still rather be able to keep you alive. Or if not you, somebody else. And it turns out you still benefit, even if you never have a use for it, because you enjoy the results of a society where people are kept alive.

      I know, your sputtering libertarian outrage prevents you from realizing how much of a benefit you get from an organized society, and how you are freed from constraints by not being cast out on the winds of fate, but that's your self-delusion, not ours.

      And no, you can't compel us to give into you.

    12. Re:Bollocks by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      I live at home and am therefore still claimed as a dependent by my parents. So I dont get any tax credits.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    13. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Car, furniture, various electronics, some firearms that were given to me by relatives, etc. It all comes out to a decent amount of money, probably around 10k,

      So we get to eat the other $40k? Thanks, buddy!

    14. Re:Bollocks by nedwidek · · Score: 4, Informative

      No company, huh? Provably wrong. Lowe's Home Improvement does for one.

      http://careers.lowes.com/benefits_part.aspx

      --
      Post anonymously - For when your opinion embarrasses even you!
    15. Re:Bollocks by Nimey · · Score: 1

      I expect your parents do, then. So what?

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    16. Re:Bollocks by feedayeen · · Score: 1

      When you get sick, I'd rather you get per-emotive care rather than wasting my health care money by rushing to the ER at 2 in the morning costing me 10 times more money.... but nope, you'd rather just get the benefits without paying.

    17. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But you aren't dependent on your parents. If you are, they should be providing your health care. You should talk to your parents about not listing you as a dependent so that you might be able to afford health insurance.

    18. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Worse, though, is YOU penalize everyone else who DOES have health insurance when your only option for health care that fits your budget is to go to the ER. That's right, your indigant (e.g., unable to pay) health care costs get passed on to those who have health insurance. YOU help directly make health care more expensive for everyone else.

      But, keep on keeping your head in the sand, if that's what feels good to you.

    19. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but should the rest of your family?

    20. Re:Bollocks by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Bet you he doesn't pay rent.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    21. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not nearly enough to cover any non-trivial ER visit.

      I got a minor laceration on my chin falling off a bike and walked myself to the hospital and got four stitches. You know how much the bill was? $1800. For four stitches and no ambulance trip. And I had to remove the stitches myself, or it would be another $900. Shit adds up quick.

      The fact is that your total net worth is less than the average emergency medical bill.

    22. Re:Bollocks by cffrost · · Score: 1

      I can't afford health insurance right now, and would rather do without as I don't feel it is right for everyone else to subsidize it and pay for it for me.

      I am happy to help subsidize your receipt of proper care via taxes, as opposed to subsidizing repayment to hospitals for unaffordable emergency room treatment for problems that were allowed to fester due to inability to personally pay for early, effective, quality care.

      If you want to ease any (IMO, misguided) sense of guilt over receiving proper care provided taxpayers/government funds, consider it an investment in improving/maintaining your ability to function as a productive (or even potentially productive) member of society. I personally believe that we're all in this together, and we all have a responsibility to help those in need, whether that need is temporary (e.g., under-/unemployment) or permanent (e.g., mental or physical disability). Please get the care you're entitled to, and if it helps, consider your share as being paid for by myself and other Americans who share my view regarding public responsibility for human welfare.

      --
      Thank you, Edward Snowden.

      "Arguments from authority are worthless." —Carl Sagan
    23. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Provably wrong, yes. Wrong from the standard of practicality? Not so much, unfortunately. Even for someone who is underemployed and over-experienced, it's often tough to get a meaningful job at a big box store, no less one that offers limited health insurance contributions.

    24. Re:Bollocks by Legion303 · · Score: 2

      "Work part time, live at home, and turn 26 this month."

      What was that you were saying about "personal responsibility"?

    25. Re:Bollocks by khallow · · Score: 0

      The affordable care act was built with you in mind, my friend. It's actually less efficient for everyone else to let people like you go without insurance, so the affordable care act is going to (hopefully) make it cheaper for you to buy insurance from the exchange or at least require your employer to help

      Or you can't afford the coverage even with the ample subsidy. An obvious effect here is that insurance costs and health care costs will go up a lot due to a big increase in demand for health care services and funneling of some health care costs into insurance costs.

      I hope this plan gets overturned in the next couple of years, else we in the US will see the main fruits of this remarkably incompetent law.

    26. Re:Bollocks by cold+fjord · · Score: 2

      It's actually less efficient for everyone else to let people like you go without insurance, so the affordable care act is going to (hopefully) make it cheaper for you to buy insurance from the exchange or at least require your employer to help out.

      Its actually cheaper in many cases for the employer to pay the fine for not providing coverage than to pay for coverage. Coverage hasn't really been getting cheaper, but more expensive as insurance companies see the writing on the wall and so raise prices now because they know that they probably won't be able to do so easily in the future. They have also been dropping children's policies for similar reasons. That also doesn't account for people that lost their jobs as business shutdown some locations or down-sized so as to stay under the level that triggers required compliance with the law.

      You won't be "fined for being poor" unless you're ignorant ideology prevents you from taking advantage.

      Apparently you can find no wrong in a 2,000+ page bill significantly altering the role of government and establishing new power over the lives of individual Americans that was passed without anyone reading the whole thing first. The lack of reading it first explains the stream of negative news about yet another unintended consequence of the law. What is it that explains that? Ignorant ideology?

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    27. Re:Bollocks by bzipitidoo · · Score: 1

      We, the people, didn't spend all this money to raise and educate you to have you end up dying should you suffer some minor, easily curable medical problem. What do you suppose will happen if, say, you're injured in an automobile accident, perhaps a broken bone? We will treat it promptly. We won't hold up treatment to check your insurance, credit rating, bank account, employment status or anything else like that. We will not let it fester, making treatment more expensive, or recovery longer and less certain. We won't spend valuable minutes shoving a price list in your face. Hurt people are in no condition to bargain for medical care.

      You already are covered, even if you don't understand it. Emergency rooms cannot turn you away for lack of insurance, if you have a genuinely life threatening problem. Since such is the case, let's stop fooling ourselves about it. Medical care ought not to be handled like a commodity good. Shopping for medical care is not like shopping for groceries. We are prompt with emergency situations, but we are woefully laggard with less immediate problems. Many people have no choice but to let such problems fester until they are an emergency. This costs us all greatly. And after treatment, we really screw it up. We treat former patients as if they had a choice and knew the prices beforehand. Medical providers are among the quickest to turn a debt over to a slimy debt collector.

      --
      Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
    28. Re:Bollocks by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Obama wants the top tax bracket to go up 3%. That's it. It was higher under Reagan.

      Actually, President Obama wants the top rate to go from 35% to 39.6% (4.6%). There is also likely a double hit there as many states index their taxes to Federal taxes, so an increase in Federal taxes results in an increase in state taxes. He also wants to increase the capital gains tax by 33%, from 15% to 20%. And this isn't all,:

      Factbox: Stark differences in Ryan, Romney, Obama tax plans

      - Personal income taxes: Obama would keep tax rates the same for families making less than $250,000 annually. For families earning more than that, he would raise the top two tax brackets to 36 percent and 39.6 percent. The highest tax rates have been 33 percent and 35 percent for the last 11 years.

      Obama in February offered a long list of corporate tax breaks he wants to end, ranging from accelerated depreciation and inventory accounting to interest on overseas profits and various tax provisions benefiting oil and gas companies. . . .

      - Investment income: Obama wants to raise the tax rate on dividends to match the ordinary income tax rate for the two highest income brackets. He would boost capital gains taxes from 15 percent to 20 percent for that group.

      Private equity and other financiers would see a portion of their compensation, known as "carried interest," taxed as ordinary income, a change from the 15 percent rate they pay now.

      - Alternative minimum tax: Obama has endorsed the "Buffett rule," named for billionaire investor Warren Buffett. It would require households making more than $1 million a year to pay at least 30 percent of their income in taxes.

      - Estate tax: Obama backs restoring the 45 percent estate tax level after a $3.5 million exemption imposed on assets passed to heirs. The current estate tax level is a 35 percent tax after the first $5 million.

      - Corporate tax rates: The president would lower the top corporate rate to 28 percent from 35 percent. A corporation's foreign profits would be subject to an unspecified minimum tax rate. Businesses would get a 20-percent income tax credit to move operations into the United States while tax deductions for shifting operations abroad would be dropped.

      There would be other consequences in a newly reelected President Obama as well.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    29. Re:Bollocks by feedayeen · · Score: 1

      "Work part time, live at home, and turn 26 this month."

      What was that you were saying about "personal responsibility"?

      Hey, I pay for the high speed Internet connection... I mean, my mother was happy with dialup! On top of that, I do chores!

    30. Re:Bollocks by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      You won't be "fined for being poor" unless you're ignorant ideology prevents you from taking advantage.

      Has it occurred to you that some people, particularly those whose labor does not justify the additional costs imposed by Obamacare, will simply not be employed? If these people remain unemployed then how will they be able to afford insurance at any price, subsidized or not? It's like the minimum wage laws. The left ends up hurting precisely the people whom they would most like to help.

    31. Re:Bollocks by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      I can't get a full time job even with a Master's degree.

      It's unfortunate that Americans in general and young Americans in particular have been forced to endure the largely unnecessary hardships of the past four years. Hopefully, now that the young have been suitably punished for their idealism, they will not make the same mistake a second time and vote again for Obama. To paraphrase the well known quotation, "To lose four years may be regarded as misfortune, losing eight sounds more like carelessness."

    32. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I have plague, but I would rather go without a cure because I don't want to feel like I participate in a wider society. The dozen people I've infected so far might disagree, but that's because they're Democrat voters"

      Universal healthcare is to everybody's benefit. Yes, right now aged 26 you think you're immortal. Here's some bad news for you, I was 25 when I got cancer. Not a freak outlier, some cancers (in this case Hodgkins) have a "double bump" where they tend to occur for men in their 20s and then old people. Without healthcare, what would have happened is that I'd have got very, very sick, and then I'd be sent for emergency care, where they would say "Huh, you have terminal cancer, that sucks" and treat me enough to send me home to die. That's "cheap" right? Well, I mean, one emergency acute-care bed for say, a couple of days? And then death, cheap cardboard box, put the ashes in a landfill.

      With healthcare, what happened is that I said "I have this weird lump" and the doctors diagnosed me, I got chemotherapy and radiotherapy, they cured me, and here I am a decade later still paying taxes. I paid about $350 000 in taxes since I didn't die. Is that a bad deal? I happen to think it's a pretty good deal, and that's why I'm glad to live in a country with Universal healthcare.

      Get healthcare, vote out idiots who think it should be optional, and while you're at it get rid of people who support it when they propose it, but are against it when their political opponents propose it. Those people are opportunist scumbags and don't need any kind of role in government.

    33. Re:Bollocks by Phelan · · Score: 1

      10k? People are terrible at estimating the worth their stuff has. So that's probably closer to 2 or 3k (I'm not talking replacement cost I'm talking if we had to sell the stuff wholesale)

      So we got the MRI and an aspirin covered at ER rate... congrats what are we getting for the rest of your bill?

      Health insurance mandate protects the responsible part of the population from the irresponsible part that thinks they are invincible. Because right now we as a society are paying for the idiots that are using the ER as their general physician

      --
      "Nimis exaltatus rex sedet in vertice - caveat ruinam!"
    34. Re:Bollocks by lexman098 · · Score: 1

      Coverage hasn't really been getting cheaper, but more expensive as insurance companies see the writing on the wall and so raise prices now because they know that they probably won't be able to do so easily in the future. They have also been dropping children's policies for similar reasons.

      So let's perpetually bend over to the insurance companies hoping to God that they keep rates reasonable. The point of the exchanges is to introduce some competition so that insurance companies can't easily abuse customers as you describe.

      The lack of reading it first explains the stream of negative news about yet another unintended consequence of the law. What is it that explains that? Ignorant ideology?

      Yes assuming this "new negative news stream" that I haven't noticed is coming from Fox News. It also explains why you think no one has read the bill.

    35. Re:Bollocks by groslyunderpaid · · Score: 1

      You do realize, however, that even if he has insurance, and gets a $50,000 bill, he pays his $2k deductible, and then 20% of the remaining 48k ($9,600) that he still has to pay $11,600 even though he has insurance? Then whats the fucking point?

      Why would a person who makes $20k or $30k give a flying fuck about reducing their bill from $50k to $11.6k? Whats the difference? Even after ponying up for the insurance that they feel they cannot afford, they still get hit with a bill equal to 2 years worth of rent payments, or more. Paying off 11.6k at $50 a month (which they probably can't afford, since they couldn't afford insurance to begin with) at 0% interest would still take 20 years to pay off. And thats assuming that you stay in perfect health the next 20 years and never have to add onto that debt.

      Insurance is worthless to these people until something is done about the underlying cost of healthcare to begin with.

    36. Re:Bollocks by Hatta · · Score: 1

      The rest of us paying for your insurance is STILL CHEAPER!

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    37. Re:Bollocks by Nidi62 · · Score: 1

      What was that you were saying about "personal responsibility"?

      Kind of hard to afford rent when you work 20 hours a week and only make $11.20 an hour. I should know, I tried it for a year while I was finishing grad school. Most of my student loans didn't go to the school, they went towards an apartment. Believe me, if I could find a full time job I'd be gone in a heartbeat.

      --
      The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
    38. Re:Bollocks by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Yes assuming this "new negative news stream" that I haven't noticed is coming from Fox News. It also explains why you think no one has read the bill.

      I'm sure you don't mean to be obtuse, but what I wrote was, "passed without anyone reading the whole thing first." Are you going to deny that is true? They were making massive deletions and additions up till the last moment. Do you think passing major laws with massive effects on 1/6 of the economy without reading them first, let alone study, understand, and debate them, is a good thing? This isn't the first time that happed.

      Passing unread laws

      Welcome to Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s House of Representatives. The “people’s House” is now a place where bills are voted on not only before legislators or the public have read them, but also before parts of the bills even have been written. Such was the case with a 300-page amendment to the cap-and-trade bill the House passed on June 26. The House leadership could not even produce this amendment on paper, in final form, before it was voted on.

      Fox New, AP, whatever, I can't account for you being uninformed.

      Kids with Pre-Existing Conditions NOT Covered By Obamacare
      Now the AP tells us

      Hours after President Barack Obama signed historic health care legislation, a potential problem emerged. Administration officials are now scrambling to fix a gap in highly touted benefits for children.

      Obama made better coverage for children a centerpiece of his health care remake, but it turns out the letter of the law provided a less-than-complete guarantee that kids with health problems would not be shut out of coverage.

      Under the new law, insurance companies still would be able to refuse new coverage to children because of a pre-existing medical problem, said Karen Lightfoot, spokeswoman for the House Energy and Commerce Committee, one of the main congressional panels that wrote the bill Obama signed into law Tuesday.

      - - - - -

      So let's perpetually bend over to the insurance companies hoping to God that they keep rates reasonable. The point of the exchanges is to introduce some competition so that insurance companies can't easily abuse customers as you describe.

      To borrow your phrase, do you know who you will bending over to instead? (And won't that be so much better? You can always try to change insurance companies, at least till now, but you aren't really going to change the IRS, are you?)

      IRS looking to hire thousands of tax agents to enforce health care laws

      A March 18 report from House Ways & Means Committee Republicans estimates the IRS will need to hire between 11,800 and 16,500 new agents to enforce the bill.

      No One Would Miss ObamaCare, but the Window for Repeal Is Two Years
      Its alleged benefits are overrated, and by 2014 the bureaucratic mess may be impossible to untangle.

      The primary place ObamaCare's pre-existing condition provision will have an impact is in the individual market, where about 14 million people buy their own coverage. Individuals are the ones most likely to wait until they need coverage to buy it; hence ObamaCare's mandate requiring them to have insurance.

      However, most states had made provisions for the "uninsurables" long before ObamaCare came around. Thirty-five states have created state-based high-risk pools—Minnesota and Connecticut established the first ones as far back as 1976

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    39. Re:Bollocks by lexman098 · · Score: 1

      I'm sure you don't mean to be obtuse, but what I wrote was, "passed without anyone reading the whole thing first." Are you going to deny that is true? They were making massive deletions and additions up till the last moment. Do you think passing major laws with massive effects on 1/6 of the economy without reading them first, let alone study, understand, and debate them, is a good thing?

      Obviously I can't speak to what each congressman did or did not read before voting, but my point was that by the same token neither can you. Neither of us know the inner workings of what each and every congressman does in preparing for a vote and it's possible, since this is what they do for a living, that they have a way of dealing with last minute changes. Let's see how the bill turns out before shunning them for supposedly not doing their job.

      Such was the case with a 300-page amendment to the cap-and-trade bill the House passed on June 26.

      A March 18 report from House Ways & Means Committee Republicans estimates the IRS will need to hire between 11,800 and 16,500 new agents to enforce the bill.

      Strawman

      Fox New, AP, whatever, I can't account for you being uninformed.

      Kids with Pre-Existing Conditions NOT Covered By Obamacare Now the AP tells us

      Nice how you only quoted the first half of this article, let me finish it for you Mr. Informed:

      However, if a child is accepted for coverage, or is already covered, the insurer cannot exclude payment for treating a particular illness, as sometimes happens now. For example, if a child has asthma, the insurance company cannot write a policy that excludes that condition from coverage. The new safeguard will be in place later this year.

      Full protection for children would not come until 2014, said Kate Cyrul, a spokeswoman for the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, another panel that authored the legislation. That's the same year when insurance companies could no longer deny coverage to any person on account of health problems.

      Most of the bill takes effect in 2014.

      href="http://online.wsj.com/article

      Please.

      The healthcare reform bill referred to as "Obamacare" was sloppy work done in a reckless manner, passed by hook or by crook, that stands a good chance of being an expensive fiasco. It has already had plenty of unintended consequences, and more are likely.

      I can see why you think that, and I'm not saying it's a perfect solution but your facts don't add up.

    40. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since the early 90's health care cost have become increasingly illegitimate because big pharma and insurance agencies have the power to fix the price. What the government did in the form obamacare was that instead of correcting the price fixing and corruption they found a scapegoat to blame their problems on ie "the uninsured". Your bleeding heart notion that this was some act of benevolence only ironically demonstrates your own acceptance of misinformation.

    41. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may live in a nice home.

      You may have plenty of quality of food to eat, and even own a car that isn't spewing black smoke.

      But guess what?

      You aren't middle class.

      And working part time, with your food and shelter provided, you actually afford healthcare it will just interfere with your play money.

      In spite of you claims of responsibility and whining about being penalized, which you're not. You're just a cheap, irresponsible fuck making excuses.

    42. Re:Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently you aren't old enough to realize that insurance companies were already jacking up insurance costs. My insurance premiums doubled from 2006-2007. So blaming Obamacare is bullshit from the profiteering insurance companies because they don't want any regulation, and Romney would do that for them.

    43. Re:Bollocks by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Apparently you aren't old enough to realize that not only insurance prices, but the actual cost of care has been going up faster than the rate of inflation for many years. But Obamacare has been a force of its own, and has resulted in many workers losing their coverage since employers see the writing on the wall. There are other roads they could have taken in reform, but they decided to jam this one through on a party-line vote, heavily amended up till the last moment, unread, late at night, requiring massive bribes to even their own. You might be cheering now, but will you in the end?

      Judging by NHS experience, I wouldn't bet on it, the games have barely started.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    44. Re:Bollocks by Legion303 · · Score: 1

      But that wasn't my point. What you're doing is making excuses. If you really, truly believed in taking personal responsibility you'd be living in a flophouse or under a bridge instead of letting someone else pay your bills for you.

      I'm not being flippant. Sometimes it's OK to accept help when you need it. Just don't be a hypocrite in the process.

  10. Re:I'm voting AGAINST whitey by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

    In fact, he does not. Five sons, no daughters.

  11. South Florida independent voter here... by belgo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... and I was just voting my conscience (last Sunday, during early voting, as it happened). The two 'major' parties both want to send your children to die in countries that did not attack us in 2001, and both parties enjoy ordering record numbers of wiretaps, both with and without warrants, every single year. Both 'major' parties are also huge, huge fans of welfare, as long as the recipients are banks. I know one of them will win (and given their similarities, it doesn't matter which). But I'll sleep better knowing I had no part in endorsing their sociopathy.

    1. Re:South Florida independent voter here... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "... and both parties enjoy ordering record numbers of wiretaps..."

      Not to mention hookers. Also without warrants.

    2. Re:South Florida independent voter here... by belgo · · Score: 1

      Your case does not nullify the numerous other examples. I respectfully submit that I am therefore not spreading a lie, unless Afghanistan, Libya, Pakistan, and others also undertook unprovoked attacks.

    3. Re:South Florida independent voter here... by Whiteox · · Score: 1

      Well scratch Pakistan off that list as their intelligence service is proactively attacking troops of all nations, not just the US.

      --
      Don't be apathetic. Procrastinate!
    4. Re:South Florida independent voter here... by upside · · Score: 1

      Iraq did not start a war against the USA. The US invaded Iraq on false pretenses, without a declaration of war. It broke international laws in doing so, and when a western democracy blew the whistle on it we got Freedom Fries. Hamburgers ought to be called gulliburgers in the rest of the world.

      --
      I'm sorry if I haven't offended anyone
  12. Peace by JackPepper · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If I can get a ballot, I am voting for Libertarian Gary Johnson. He would pull all the troops (Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea, Germany, Japan, etc.) home right away and stop the drone strikes. That's enough for me. How do Democrats or Republicans expect people to believe in their government, when their government continues to murder innocent civilians in other countries?

    1. Re:Peace by narcc · · Score: 0

      It's cute the people thing these third-party candidates matter.

      It's super cute that these third-party candidates are having a little debate.

      Overall, I support this. They'll learn a lot about how government works. I wonder if they'll play with one of those Model UN groups when their done playing "run for president".

    2. Re:Peace by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's cute seeing the mutilated remains of innocent Iraqi citizens spread all over the ground because of US "peace missions", isn't it?

    3. Re:Peace by u64 · · Score: 1

      Each vote for a so-called "third-candidate" is also a vote *less* on the DemReps. It's a win-win.

    4. Re:Peace by Anonymatt · · Score: 1

      You're a drag, motherfucker.

  13. Dammit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just stop already. a 3rd party is a fucking joke. and it's an old joke now. a sad joke at the expense of hope.

    Voting is just the bread and circuses to keep us busy. AND IT KEEPS FUCKING WORKING!
    The system is not going to change until we ALL stop voting D and R.

    Fuck even here on slashdot every damm topic devolves into a D/R flamewar.

    There is no '3rd party'. Its just some other people who would like to get elected and stand no chance in hell of that happening. Just stop already.

  14. 7:30pm ET techincal difficulty? by colfer · · Score: 1

    The debate is supposed to have started at 7:30pm Eastern. The sites are not working.

    1. Re:7:30pm ET techincal difficulty? by colfer · · Score: 1

      And in fact:

      It looks like Busboys and Poets are having tech difficulties. We are looking for an alternative feed that we can pick up.

      Sorry for the connectivity problems, we are currently working on the broadband issues. The full sound and video will be available on YouTube tomorrow. Stay tuned.

      http://nader.org/2012/11/03/to-view-third-party-debate-at-busboys-and-poets-nov-4/

  15. I don't know about you all by fustakrakich · · Score: 0, Troll

    But I'm voting for Romney!

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    1. Re:I don't know about you all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Troll

      Hey, idiot moderator, did you even try to check the guy's real name?

  16. Why vote third party? by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you're voting (or would, if you could) for other than the Democratic or Republican parties' candidates this year, what drives that decision?

    Maybe it's because I only see minor differences between the two major parties. Under both the D's & R's, the size & scope of government has increased, and our liberties are being decreased. What liberties you ask? How about the right to have medical marijuana in a state where the voters have decided it should be legal, but the Feds are conducting record numbers of raids? How about not having a presumption of guilt when trying to travel via airplane? How about the right to not be spied on without due process? That's just the start. I'm not 100% libertarian, but I'll still be casting my vote for all of the LP's candidates on my ballot. We need competition in the political marketplace just like we do in the financial marketplace.

    --
    Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    1. Re:Why vote third party? by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      You should be glad you're not getting the full attention of the federally mandated "civil liberties", like the one to indefinite detention. Once your right to be a free citizen can be taken away without a trial, the rest of your rights are pretty minor, and you'll need more than medical marijuana to make the detention trip fun. If anything I'd like to see more state rebellion against the mandates of the federal government, in hopes our whole government deadlocks rather than keeping up the Change it's been enacting recently.

    2. Re:Why vote third party? by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      You should be glad you're not getting the full attention of the federally mandated "civil liberties", like the one to indefinite detention.

      Yeah, my list was not meant to be an exhaustive one, but I listed a few just in case somebody decided to ask "Oh really, what liberties have you lost?" like someone always does.

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
  17. not the last debate; one more 11/5 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is another presidential debate between Jill Stein and Gary Johnson tomorrow night (Monday 11/5), hosted by Free&Equal.

  18. Vote 3rd party by FrankHS · · Score: 1

    Neither of the candidates represent me. I am a liberal who wants maximum freedom. While I will vote peace and freedom, I have much more in common with both the peace and freedom part and the libertarian party than either the democrats or the republicans.

    Both the democrats and the republicans are owned by special interests (read people richer that 99% of the people). It's not even a secret. the solicit campaign contributions (bribes) openly.

    So why give either one your vote?

  19. Re:Pompous idiot by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 1

    Nader is the pompous idiot who gavels 8 years of George Bush

    I'm going to dream of a mallet wielding Nadar smacking George, with a clown horn sound every time he connects. Not because of your post, that's just the way I roll.

  20. The key issue for me is integrity by jtw78 · · Score: 1

    I voted (by mail in Oregon) for Johnson (LIB). Though there are some things he's for that I don't agree with, he's consistent with his beliefs and actions. I can't say the same for either Romney or Obama. I can't, in good conscience, vote for someone who lies, goes back on their word, and doesn't feel like it's a big deal. I realize that I'm basically saying I don't want to participate in the American political system since so many of the politicians are without integrity. I'm not quite ready to give up on the whole thing, but it's getting close.

  21. I wish I could give up on my party by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But the issues that President Obama has taken a stand on, like gay marriage, are too important for me to pass up right now. I mean, we all talk about personal liberties being taken away-- imagine if you were gay! Not being able to see your spouse in the ****ing hospital. That's not acceptable. That's a clear choice, for me. I know, I wish we could have so many other things right now.. but there enough issues at stake here that even though I wish we had more parties, or better yet a direct democracy and no politicians at all.. I've got to vote against bigotry and hatred, and the way for me to do that is pretty obvious.

    1. Re:I wish I could give up on my party by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      Yes, Obama has been very clear, you're allowed to see your gay spouse, no problem, unless one of you is considered a terrorist. Then it's off to indefinite detention for them with no trial, as approved by the man himself. The reason to support a third party here is very simple. Obama has trashed the ultimate civil liberty, the right to be a free citizen. The only acceptable platform for Romney would start be "I will eliminate Obama's destruction of civil liberties". Since it's not, a vote for either is agreeing that's acceptable behavior. That's why 3rd-party candidates are needed, to provide some alternative to the madness of both existing major parties. Picking one based on trivia like gay rights is ridiculous when this situation exists.

  22. Conscience by chill · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm voting Gary Johnson (L) because I'm impressed with his accomplishments and agree with his philosophy.

    End the wars, legalize and tax drugs, practice fiscal responsibility.

    He's a self-made millionaire businessman who also has an excellent record as a 2-term governor. He was praised by both Republicans and Democrats alike for being able to work with all parties and get the job done.

    His bio and record speak for themselves:

    http://www.garyjohnson2012.com/about

    http://www.garyjohnson2012.com/record

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    1. Re:Conscience by Andy+Prough · · Score: 1

      End the wars, legalize and tax drugs, practice fiscal responsibility.

      I might be wrong, but I've always thought that if you remove the "legalize and tax drugs" plank from the platform, the Libertarian party would be one of the most successful overnight. A huge percentage of people would vote for smaller, less expensive government and fewer (or no) wars - right? Unfortunately, I think the legalization of drugs is a deal-killer for a lot of moderate independents who would otherwise vote for a Libertarian agenda, just as the D & R positions on abortion (for and against) turn off huge numbers of people.

      Simply changing the attitude about illegal drugs to advocating a more "fiscally responsible" response to the illegal drug problem would make a lot of sense, as that is the Libertarian policy for so many other government activities.

    2. Re:Conscience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Other than the position on Drugs and Jesus, nobody can tell the Libertarians from the Republicans.

    3. Re:Conscience by Bigby · · Score: 1

      And War and Balancing the Budget and Taxes and Welfare

    4. Re:Conscience by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Gary Johnson's record certainly does speak for itself. Particularly telling is the part where he privatized the prison industry in New Mexico.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    5. Re:Conscience by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, I think the legalization of drugs is a deal-killer for a lot of moderate independents

      If you are in favor of the imprisoment of non violent drug offenders you are not moderate by any stretch of the imagination. You are a straight up authoritarian. Authoritarians happen to control the political center in the US, but that doesn't make them moderates. The war on drugs is an atrocity and anyone who supports it is evil.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    6. Re:Conscience by chill · · Score: 1

      The problem is the "War on Drugs" has done massive harm to our country. By driving up the price of something a great many citizens are willing to risk imprisonment for, it has created an orgy of violence.

      There is so much money involved people are willing to commit obscene acts of violence to get their share.

      Add to that the massive numbers of people in prison and the related cost for housing them is staggering. And then there is the impact to society, both families and the economy as a whole, when trying to integrate these "criminals" back in to society as productive members.

      All this for what is essentially the equivalent of having a drink. Marijuana, at the very least, should be treated just like alcohol as far as legal status is concerned.

      You're right in that is has to be "spun" properly to sell it to the public.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    7. Re:Conscience by retchdog · · Score: 1

      contradiction. legalizing drugs would be a huge step toward smaller government and a small but significant step toward less international meddling.

      and it's an informative contradiction. everyone says they are for smaller government, but what they mean is that they want lower taxes and fewer services for others; almost everyone wants to keep their own entitlements.

      if you compare drug legalization with any concrete plan to shrink government significantly, drug legalization would be much more popular (as of course it would be to any moderate, since it would be a simpler endeavor). to the general public, "smaller government" is merely a thought-terminating cliche; a simplistic outlet for their frustrations.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    8. Re:Conscience by chill · · Score: 1

      You seem to be implying that is a bad thing. Why?

      The laws and rules come from the gov't. It is just the day-to-day management that is run by a private corporation. What is wrong with that?

      If they're doing something against the law, prosecute them. If they're doing something legal, but you don't like, change the law.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    9. Re:Conscience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you are in favor of the imprisoment of non violent drug offenders you are not moderate by any stretch of the imagination. You are a straight up authoritarian.

      I presume you mean "pot" where he said "drugs". Legalization of Coke and Heroine is probably a really really bad idea. I'd agree that government shouldn't dictate what people do in their own home. It's that those things have a huge influence outside their home as well - and not just because they're illegal. Go ahead, ask someone who has "recovered" from a heroine addiction if it should be legalized. Go on, DO IT and then come back and tell us what you've found.

    10. Re:Conscience by Hatta · · Score: 1

      There should never be a profit motive to keep people in prison. That conflict of interest is completely unconscionable.

      If they're doing something legal, but you don't like, change the law.

      Oh, I get it, you're trolling. In case you're not, you might be surprised to learn that money counts more than justice when it comes to the law in the US. Those private prisons have a lot more money to spend on getting laws passed to keep people in jail for longer than I do.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    11. Re:Conscience by Hatta · · Score: 1

      No, I mean drugs. Why don't you ask a former heroin addict whether criminalization of heroin kept him from becoming addicted? Criminalization doesn't work.

      So given that we'll never eradicate it how can we make it less harmful? We already did this before with alcohol. A drug, btw, which is more addictive and more toxic than heroin.

      The answer is to legalize it, provide honest education about it, and provide treatment for those who want it. The stigma of criminalization more harmful than the drug itself.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    12. Re:Conscience by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      The for profit prison industry is the new slavery. Anyone who supports the industry doesn't give a damn about liberty.

    13. Re:Conscience by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      They would never get the support of the bible thumpers, and their discredited supply side economic policies would harm the country.

    14. Re:Conscience by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      Clearly, if you ask a heroin addict if the current policies have kept him from being addicted, the answer is no. Try asking some non-heroin addicts.

    15. Re:Conscience by Hatta · · Score: 1

      I have. I've never met anyone who claimed the law was a reason they didn't do heroin. People who are likely to do heroin aren't likely to give much thought to consequences. Therefore they're not going to give much thought to breaking the law.

      There's nobody out there just waiting for drugs to be legalized to get themselves addicted. People who want drugs go and get them. This is supported by the fact that wherever drugs are decriminalized (even heroin), use and the associated harms are reduced.

      In fact, the harms caused by criminalization are so bad that even if we saw an increase in addiction society would be better off on the whole after decriminalization. Clean, cheap, pharmaceutical grade heroin means that there will be no accidental overdoses. No blood borne diseases due to shared needles. No robberies will be necessary to get a fix when the government supplies your drug for pennies a day. Hell, with known doses, a steady supply, and the acquisition of tolerance many heroin addicts can even function as valued employees and family members.

      Addiction doesn't stop users of caffeine or nicotine from contributing to society. There are even a large number of functional alcoholics. We'd be better off if we allowed the heroin addicts among us to contribute to society rather than persecuting them.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    16. Re:Conscience by someSnarkyBastard · · Score: 1

      And to many folks (myself for instance) those are two major differences that trickle out into other parts of the party platform and deserve mentioning.

    17. Re:Conscience by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      I agree with you. I merely objected to the suggestion to ask a former heroin addict if the laws kept him from becoming addicted which is logically negative.

    18. Re:Conscience by donny77 · · Score: 1

      There should never be a profit motive to keep people in prison. That conflict of interest is completely unconscionable.

      And yet there is a well documented "profit" motive for government run prisons. http://youtu.be/Zq7heLS2ydQ. Isn't that a pickle?

  23. Here's the Problem by fm6 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I agree that you should vote for somebody you believe in, even if they have no chance of winning. My problem is that I can't believe in any of these bozos. Just picture any one of them in the White House. Could they govern? They could not.

      The U.S. isn't an elected dictatorship — POTUS has to govern in tandem with Congress. If you're not satisfied with the current crowd, you need to replace the whole crowd, not just one guy. You have to work on electing Congresspeople who reflect your views. If you're not willing to do that, all this crap with fring Presidential candidates is a waste of time.

    1. Re:Here's the Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you think someone who was a two term governor couldn't govern? I take it you think the one term governor, Mitt Romney, is even more of a bozo who couldn't govern?

    2. Re:Here's the Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Gary Johnson could govern. He did it for two terms as governor of New Mexico, and when he left (due to term limits), NM was one of only four states with a budget surplus.

      He actually has more experience than Obama did when he became president.

    3. Re:Here's the Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Wait, so a popular and successful two-term governor of the state of New Mexico is not capable of running a government as well as an ex-governor of Massachusetts? Or how about that first-term senator from Illinois four years ago?

      That's one of the stupidest things i've heard said about the third party candidates. I agree that Jill Stein might not know much about governing (yet), but Gary Johnson and Virgil Goode are quite experienced and capable.

    4. Re:Here's the Problem by fm6 · · Score: 1

      I'm not questioning his administrative skill. I'm questioning his ability to actually do anything with a non-Libertarian congress.

  24. In case anyone missed it... by cffrost · · Score: 4, Informative

    In case anyone missed the 4-way debate moderated by Larry King in Chicago on 2012-10-23:

    https://kat.ph/torrents/20121023-full-third-party-presidential-debate-yt-avi-t6769764/

    All of the presidential candidates' social/economic ideologies are graphed here. [Note the proximity of the two corporate parties' candidates.]

    Please—especially if you live in an uncontested state—vote for the best candidate, not the second-least-worst candidate; our country (and especially our civil liberties) have taken just about all the "lesser evil" that can be withstood.

    This quiz can help you determine which candidate best matches your own ideology.

    --
    Thank you, Edward Snowden.

    "Arguments from authority are worthless." —Carl Sagan
    1. Re:In case anyone missed it... by PhrostyMcByte · · Score: 1

      Political Compass puts me very close to Stein, while isidewith says I agree more with Johnson's policies -- who is far far far on the right at PC. I guess gauging someone's politics is a bit difficult with a quiz.

    2. Re:In case anyone missed it... by HappyEngineer · · Score: 1

      According to isidewith, I match Jill Stein 90%, Gary Johnson 86%, Obama 75% and Romney 12%.

      The idea that I match both the Green and Libertarian parties is interesting. I think this is the result of me putting social freedoms as my highest priorities.

      Furthermore, I match the libertarian party 68% and the Republican party 4%. That shows pretty clearly how un-libertarian the Republican party really is (at least with respect to all the issues I care about).

      Since I live in California I think I'll vote either Green or Libertarian for president.

    3. Re:In case anyone missed it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm at similar numbers (romney's doing 15% for me, apparently).
      Wonder who made that website, and if that person is a Jill Stein fan.

      (Point of this comment is to tell you to think about the reliability of the source, not to get an actual answer in one case)

  25. Why I don't limit my votes to "major" candidates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll be voting Libertarian (Johnson). My preferences fall between the stereotypical Republican and Democrat -- I agree with each of them on some issues, but I lean towards Democrats. Since I don't have a strong preference for one over the other, it's easy for me to vote for neither. I am opposed to the two-party consensus on a number of important issues and want to open up the debate on those issues. The major issues that concern me are our global military deployments, the concentration of power in the Presidency, and the drug war (and the associated destabilization of Mexico). I hoped Obama would make progress on these points, but he hasn't. With the Fiscal Cliff, the established parties have demonstrated that they are not the "responsible grown-ups" that they pretend to be.

    More fundamentally, I think that voting is wholly symbolic. It is irrational to treat it as a strategic decision.

  26. My voting plans? by King_TJ · · Score: 3, Informative

    I, too, have no plans to vote for either Obama or Romney. I think a vote should only be cast for someone you're confident is a good choice for running the country. Neither one of these people have shown they deserve the title of President, IMO.

    I really dislike that "vote for the lesser of two evils" concept. People have been doing that for a long time now, and that's largely how we got to the mess we're in today!

    It seems to me that the current system has a razor sharp focus on ensuring everything quickly comes down to only 2 remaining viable candidates, at all costs. If a 3rd. party shows promise, the media or members of one of the two established parties pull out all the stops to discredit him or her. They want politics to run just like our sports teams ... only 2 teams on the field fighting it out to see who wins. No matter how many teams play each other in a season, it has to come down to only two in the end, to declare someone the winner.

    Until this changes, the American people really aren't able to vote for the type of government they want. They're only able to pick from two people pre-selected for them by the elite (meaning those with enough money and influence to boil the choices down to the final two they want to see you pick from). And sure, you CAN vote for a 3rd. party candidate (and I almost always do so). But we all know it's currently nothing more than a small display of contempt for the status quo system. I really doubt any sane person voting for, say, Gary Johnson, believes he really has a decent shot at winning.

    Still, that's fine with me. You don't earn a prize for having voted for the guy who winds up winning.

    1. Re:My voting plans? by MrEdofCourse · · Score: 1

      If you don't live in a swing state, voting for Romney or Obama won't make a difference, but it's not necessarily a "lesser of two evils". Do you really believe Obama and Romney would do everything exactly the same? If so, well... that would be pretty clueless. I could understand though if you felt Obama and Romney had their strengths and weaknesses and would weight them such that rating them would be exactly the same... but really what are the chances of that?

      If one candidate seems even slightly better than the other, and you live in a swing state, I would strongly encourage you to vote for that candidate.

      "They're only able to pick from two people pre-selected for them by the elite (meaning those with enough money and influence to boil the choices down to the final two they want to see you pick from). "

      I totally disagree. We had a chance to vote for Gary Johnson as a Republican. He failed to get enough support early on, so he dropped out and is now "running" as a 3rd party candidate, but this is silly. It's not only that he can't win, but that he couldn't even win within one party.

      Sorry, but I hear far too many people who don't participate in the primaries...and really even before that, who then complain about "the lesser of two evils" and then decide to not vote or vote 3rd party.

      You have a binary choice that you're presented with today. Vote for Obama or vote for Romney. Not voting for either is not making the binary choice.

      If you want more choices, sorry, but you're too late. 2016 is coming up, so be prepared and get involved early enough to make a difference... no not to support another 3rd party who has no chance, but support someone who can first get the nomination of one of the two parties.

      I think a lot of people don't realize how unlikely this process is to ever change, or how unlikely it is that there will be a 3rd party president. In order for Johnson to win now, he'd have to get more votes than Romney and Obama ***combined***. That's a huge challenge considering he couldn't even beat Romney in the primaries.

      And who's going to change the system? Neither Obama, nor Romney, nor anyone in either of the two parties in power. While occasionally we get a 3rd party who gets people in Congress, these people either usually don't last long or gain significant power within Congress.

      Whatever you decide though, I respect your opinion, and right to vote however you want, including not at all.

    2. Re:My voting plans? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I mostly agree with you. I live in a non-swing state, so I will be voting third party, but I know third parties can't win realistically: I just want to make that little nudge to the Overton window which hopefully nudges the public discussion about politics a little bit away from the Romney and Obama. Realistically, it probably really does nothing at all.

      On the other hand, voting is a state and local issue, not a federal issue (with some caveats), so if you want to change how voting works, you should start at the local level wherever you are. It is a lot easier to do politics at the local level than the federal level.

      Furthermore, Romney and Obama are presenting the policies they are because they are supporting compromise views that they really believe (or know from polling data) a lot of people agree with. As much as you can say one particular politician has horrible policies, you have to remember that tens of millions of people are will to vote for them while being aware of those policies. Maybe those policies really aren't so horrible once you understand the entire context. Or maybe you need to convince lots of people to think differently about politics. That means being politically active and getting awareness out about issues that matter to you.

    3. Re:My voting plans? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. We've been choosing between the lesser of two evils for so long that we're only ever offered a choice between the evil of two lessers.

    4. Re:My voting plans? by WhiteDragon · · Score: 1

      I think a lot of people don't realize how unlikely this process is to ever change, or how unlikely it is that there will be a 3rd party president.

      Lincoln was the last one. Don't see too many Whig candidates these days...

      --
      Did you mount a military-grade, variable-focus MASER on an unlicensed artificial intelligence?
    5. Re:My voting plans? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want more choices, sorry, but you're too late. 2016 is coming up, so be prepared and get involved early enough to make a difference... no not to support another 3rd party who has no chance, but support someone who can first get the nomination of one of the two parties.

      And that starts with a vote for a 3rd party this year. If everyone votes mainstream R or D, then those parties will think they're providing candidates that people like and will push the same crappy type of people in 2016 and will continue the fight against the other party rather than try to fix their own.

    6. Re:My voting plans? by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      I think a lot of people don't realize how unlikely this process is to ever change, or how unlikely it is that there will be a 3rd party president.

      Lincoln was the last one. Don't see too many Whig candidates these days...

      You didn't see any in 1860, either, the Whigs having collapsed through the 1850s, and ceased as a party by the election of 1860; while the North-South issues that would soon produce the Civil War confused things a bit more than was usually the case before or since (i.e., the "National" vs. "Constitutional" split of the Democratic Party, the Constitutional Union Party), there were two clear major parties in the election of 1860, and they were the (National) Democrats and the Republicans. The only times you see new parties becoming competitive for the Presidency is after a national party has collapsed, not as "third party" candidates: Lincoln and the Republicans after the Whig collapse; the National Republican (later, Whig) Party itself several elections after the collapse of the Federalists and the era of only one national party of significance, the Democratic-Republicans.

    7. Re:My voting plans? by donny77 · · Score: 1

      I totally disagree. We had a chance to vote for Gary Johnson as a Republican. He failed to get enough support early on, so he dropped out and is now "running" as a 3rd party candidate, but this is silly. It's not only that he can't win, but that he couldn't even win within one party.

      It's all perspective. You say he couldn't even win within his party. I say the "media" and "elites" put hurdles up and limit the opportunities for these voices to be heard. If Gary Johnson had as much coverage as Newt Gingrich in the primary, could he have won? This isn't just speculation either. When Johnson ran for Governor he was polling at 3% before the governor's debate. A debate that had more than two candidates. After the debate, Johnson soared up the polls and ended up winning.

      I have a hard time trying to convince myself that a system of exclusion justifies the perceived need for a two party system. Many other countries hold elections with more than just two candidates without any problem at all. Most people I have talked to don't know who Gary Johnson is. Those that do know, are voting for him. Now, my circle of friends is not scientific by any means, but it further illustrates the point, the control is in the information. Yes, people could go do the research for themselves, but more than likely, they will not.

  27. Voting Democrat or Republican is a spoiler vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dem or Repub, what a waste of a vote. You being afraid to cast your vote for the candidate/party that comes closest to your own positions is a wasted vote, and only ensures more of the same corruption and corporate kowtowing we see with the Dem and Repub politicians.

    Anyone who votes Dem or Repub, and has misgivings is the problem. You are to blame for the mess we have in politics.

    Lets break the corporate parties' stranglehold on politics in this country. Then we can make institutional changes that will protect our interests long-term: proportional representation, rank choice ballots, classify private campaign contributions as what it is-- bribery, real debates, etc.

  28. Vote for one of these (unless you're in FL or OH) by jemenake · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If you're at all interested in getting more ideas out into the national consciousness (and if you're living in a state that Obama or Romney has a lock on), consider voting for a third-party candidate. Because of the electoral system, it's not going to change who wins the election, but it can increase the chances that one of these candidates gets a spot at some future televised debate. Once upon a time, the debates were sponsored by the National Organization of Women... and now they're run by the Commission on Presidential Debates (which is run by the Democratic and Republican parties). Being a bit of a cartel, they've managed to stipulate that the only invitees to debate must get at least 15% representation in various national polls (another classic case of the successful pulling up the ladder they used to climb to the top).

    Now, we could argue the game theory of elections and I'd have to concede that it's always going to devolve into two parties (like how tea-partiers, when the chips are really down, vote for the republican because the alternative, a democrat, would be, to them, the apocalypse), but part of how those two parties stay on top is by having a "big tent" and trying to appeal to a broad spectrum of views (okay... and also by not really specifying what their views are). And I think that, if other candidates are able to get up with the "big boys" and put forward their views, then that's more exposure... and maybe some of those views might have to get some recognition from one of the major parties.

    Frankly, after visiting ISideWith.com, I was blown away at how congruent my views are with the Green candidate, Jill Stein... to the point where I really wish more people knew that there was a candidate that was, potentially, so suited to their views. Same goes for Gary Johnson. He's not my cup of tea, but I really wish the socially-liberal/economically-conservative republican voters out there were more aware that they didn't necessarily need to throw gays and women under the bus in exchange for getting capital-gains and inheritance taxes abolished. And maybe a stronger-than-expected showing in the election will provide the social proof for some more people to look into what's up with this (Libertarian|Green|Justice| Constitution) thing.

    Of course, as I said in the subject, if you live in a swing state, then ignore the preceding rant and get your state swinging.

  29. OHHHHH canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it was real nice up here in canada when we had a minority govt ergo the party with most seats had not a majority. IT meant they actually had to work together to get stuff done and stuff that would not lose any of them votes should a election be forced or called. IT also means bad legislation can't get done....or gets a better look at and killed....

    Waves form the 6th best nation on earth ( yea them peeps form norway are still number one )

    1. Re:OHHHHH canada by Whiteox · · Score: 1

      Same in Australia. 2 independents ho;d the balance of power, so 1 major party can't dominate the other. It has its pluses, but also has some minuses.

      --
      Don't be apathetic. Procrastinate!
  30. Symbolic voting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Voting in the U.S. is symbolic in many ways mostly since we are voting ambiguously for the electoral college not for the president. However, despite a common ground between the parties on many issues I disagree with (security state, neoliberal policies), there are enough differences (regulating sexuality and womens' bodies) that I am voting for one of the big 2. Furthermore, I would argue that since we don't have parliamentary system which allows small parties to form coalitions among themselves, voting for a 3rd party at the national level is throwing away the vote. The smarter strategy is to build organizations that can move the national parties in desired directions. Both parties are coalitions in and of themselves, so the influence at this time is to organize within the power blocs.

  31. obama by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no far worse he wants to control the mind ergo IP law
    romney wants to point a gun at you and obama wants to point a lawyer at you.
    both destroy you one way or the other.

    its why everyone should stop voting and get a pitch fork

  32. Waste of a vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Half of America doesn't even know there's more than two parties. Voting is a waste of a vote regardless because America is nothing but a one party system with two identities.

  33. Personal responsibility is great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Personal responsibility is great. We just need to change the law, so that you can't take the easy way out and change the classification of healthcare expenses to non-dischargable debt and get rid of the bankruptcy option and just garnish your wadges till shit's paid for.

    You know personal responsibility.

  34. Re:ON DELETING POSTS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It's not censorship when you're too fucking retarded to move the "hide posts below this score" slider, dipshit.

    Your post isn't even -1 so you can't whine about the mods keepin' you down, you just can't figure out how to operate the fucking internet. GTFO.

  35. My Reasoning by mothlos · · Score: 2

    I have grown tired of being ruled by lizards.

    1. Re:My Reasoning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In 15 minutes, I can save you money on car insurance

  36. How is this relevant for slashdto? by Cute+and+Cuddly · · Score: 0

    I fail to see the technical or scientific relevance of this post

    1. Re:How is this relevant for slashdto? by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      "News for Nerds, Stuff that Matters." Nothing about technical or scientific relevance in the strapline. Whether this story fits either of the two qualifiers in the strapline is still up for debate, however.

  37. Re:ON DELETING POSTS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean this one? http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3228677&cid=41866287
    Try browsing at -1 next time.

  38. the real 2 issues in the USA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    What are we going to do about Marijuana legalization and the Alien question. Will we let a free people get baked and disclose that there are indeed Aliens and they give us technological advancements due to a treaty we signed with them many decades ago? That is what I would ask these 3rd party candidates.

  39. The real shame here... by idbeholda · · Score: 1

    is that a vote outside of the mainstream two party system ends up being a wasted vote in the end. It has been this way since 1853. Get used to it.

  40. Independents represent the largest share by Andy+Prough · · Score: 3, Informative

    Keep in mind that Obama took 55% of the popular vote in 2008, but with a 62% turnout, only about 34% of eligible citizens supported him enough to go vote for him. The two major parties simply do not represent majorities in this country.

    Exactly - and a large percentage of those that voted for him did not identify themselves as D's - they were "Independents". As of 2010, Gallup polling found that 31% of Americans identified as Democrats, 29% as Republicans, and 38% as independents (http://www.gallup.com/poll/145463/Democratic-Party-Drops-2010-Tying-Year-Low.aspx). So no party has even close to a majority of voters, and independents are the largest portion.

    The interesting thing is that independent voters continue to allow R's and D's to make all national elections referendums almost exclusively about their own candidates. The most successful independent or 3rd party candidates in the past 100 years were Ross Perot (18.9% in 1992), and Teddy Roosevelt (27% as a Progressive in 1912).

  41. If they eliminate the last paper ballot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well if they eliminate the last paper ballots, then the closed source voting machines will be able to generate a much more convincing fraudulant vote flip than the current 'linear' ones.

    It's ironic that third party worry about their vote *counting*, yet literally they don't worry if their vote is actually *being*counted*.

    If I were you I'd vote AGAINST the ES&S backed candidate.

    http://www.opednews.com/articles/Rigged-Elections-for-Romne-by-Michael-Collins-121022-13.html

  42. Abolish winner-take-all by ub3r+n3u7r4l1st · · Score: 1

    Either allocate electoral votes based on congressional districts (state-wide winner gets two extra votes), or just abolish the electoral college and use direct popular vote. Make all 50 states + D.C. in play.

    1. Re:Abolish winner-take-all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I support abolishing winner-take-all, but you aren't doing it.

      You're just reducing the segments a given winner can take to a smaller picture.

      Why not allocate each state by population and then proportionally award some figure? This could even be done in Congress.

      But your way? Just sets up more trouble.

    2. Re:Abolish winner-take-all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe that two states (Maine and Nebraska(?)) actually do allocate Electoral votes based on House districts. There is also a movement in some other states to form an inter-state compact that would throw ALL of the Electoral votes of ALL of the compact members to the nationwide popular vote winner, as soon as there are enough interested states that they would actually be able to control the Electoral outcome.

    3. Re:Abolish winner-take-all by Bigby · · Score: 1

      I think each state should handle their votes how they want. They should be able to choose to be winner take all or not.

      On top of that, if neither candidate can get 50% of the eligible vote, the top 3 vote getters should be a tri-President.

    4. Re:Abolish winner-take-all by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      What is the justification for allowing states lawmakers to choose how the state will vote? I don't see how the correct answer depends on locality.

  43. Re:Four candidates, summarized by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can't really disagree with the gist of that, but it's Rocky Anderson, who does indeed have a Wikipedia entry.

  44. All stop voting D and R by Andy+Prough · · Score: 1

    The system is not going to change until we ALL stop voting D and R.

    Most eligible voters do NOT vote either D or R. In 2008, the voter turnout was the highest it had been in nearly 50 years, at about 63% - meaning that 37% of eligible voters did not vote for anyone (http://timeswampland.files.wordpress.com/2008/12/2008turnout-report_final11.pdf). When you consider on average 3-5% of voters vote for an independent or 3rd party candidate, then you can see that more eligible voters do NOT vote for either a D or an R than those who vote for either major candidate.

    1. Re:All stop voting D and R by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and YOU can see that those voters would rather literally throw their vote away than throw it away on any of your shitty half-ass third parties. So ponder that for a while.

  45. Abstract by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    More like abstract. You press a button on a machine, and Fox announces the winner.

    You can't watch the count, you can't see the source code, and when election fraud is proven, they just shrug, claim it was a mistake and change the totals.

    The only thing we can do is statistically analyze the numbers they give us and see the vote was a fraud.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SYZhCG7G0S8

  46. Re:My problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My problem is every mother fucking post I make gets modded -1, Flamebait, to the point where my once Excellent karma is now abysmal and I can't post more than like 5 fucking posts per day with like 2-3 minutes forced delay between each. I've been on the site for 11 years and had excellent karma up until now. What the mother fuck?

    I can see from additional replies, there is more than one problem. However, the operator error (imo, a justifiable mistake) with the unfriendly user interface for new or infrequent users, doesn't account for the legitimate problems that you mentioned, some of the other problems previously mentioned, and shouldn't be used as a crutch to "conveniently" brush off mistakes unrelated to operator error, especially if there is general agreement the poster is viewed as unlikable or silly.

    The point system turned up to be a (hopefully one time) problem for myself. I recently made an opinionated but informative comment resulting in my email getting 6 upvotes, 2 down votes, 2 metanods and an additional +2 for UID and Karma, making it max at +5 (a +8, if you're counting). Someone stepped in and replaced it on the story page with a +1 (plus my uid and karma points, totaling +3) after an AC did a mediocre cut and paste rehashing a complicated page on another website, then someone archived (probably unintentionally) the story within a couple of days which prevented me from finally getting back with a reply in my defense. My email now inaccurately documents my comment status.

    However, it's important to mention, Slashdot makes no secret about doing any of this stuff and explains it in the faqs, etc., about their position and how they feel they're allowed to step in from time to time in a discussion to make the changes they feel appropriate (karma stuff also), including being able to know which specific members of Slashdot are posting as an AC. That means they're going to be making mistakes, misunderstandings and sadly: abuses. Unfortunately it also looks as if, taking your problem at face value, someone there got bent about one of your comments in the past and has somehow automated bad karma to indicate his displeasure.

    How accurate are these observations? Is all or only part of these problems true? I don't know. But, (as I naively say: gee wilikers Beav) I mistakenly thought the Slashdot operation was above most of this, especially with the technology glitches.

  47. Two parties and the Tax code by Andy+Prough · · Score: 1

    Half of America doesn't even know there's more than two parties.

    I don't know if that's true, but what is true is that about 40% of eligible voters typically don't even both to vote. If someone could excite that 40% (probably by coming up with a real plan for making government a lot cheaper, a lot less invasive of personal privacy, and a lot more effective), then you could have a powerful 3rd party.

    A very exciting idea would be to get the government out of the business of constantly inspecting your personal finances, by radically restructuring the tax code.

    1. Re:Two parties and the Tax code by upside · · Score: 1

      With a first past the post electoral system (one representative per constituency) you'll never get a powerful third party.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First-past-the-post_voting

      --
      I'm sorry if I haven't offended anyone
  48. Roseanne Barr / Roseanne's Nuts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They should've allowed Roseanne Barr into the debate. While I feel she's close to batshit crazy country, she would've pwned the R/D circus. I doubt she'd need the help of a teleprompter or a hidden two way comm device to debate.

    If you vote for R/D you are a part of the disease. Your vote counts, imagine if the millions of brainwashed masses awoke to this fact.

    If anything, voting for someone other than R/D sends a nice "FUCK YOU" to the system. It does matter, don't believe the lies sewn into your brain by media and peers.

  49. We don't have a Democracy by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    We have a Federal Constitutional Republic, that has strong Democratic traditions. Now that might sound like nit picking but it isn't. Due to the way we choose the president, the system is heavily stacked to only have two parties.

    So what happens is people don't actually vote for the president, they vote for electors who then vote for the president. This was put in to place because back in the day, it was pretty much the only way to do things what with the massive distances involved, and also due to the desire to give more power to the states.

    This alone might not sound like it would favour two parties, however there's another fact you need to know: In order to win an election you must have 270 electoral votes, a majority of the electoral college. Not the most, but a majority.

    So what happens if there isn't a majority? Nobody wins, and then the House of Representatives chooses the President, and the Senate chooses the Vice President. It has happened once before in US history, because there was a 4-way race.

    So the system is heavily stacked to just two parties. If you have another serious contender they might not be enough to win, but they could be enough to split the EC, which nobody wants.

    Now that only affects the presidency, but since that is the most powerful office, it filters down as well, and generally leads to a situation of two dominant parties.

    This could be changed, but would require a constitutional amendment. Those are pretty hard. 66% of both houses of congress must pass the amendment, and then 75% of the 50 state legislatures must vote to ratify it. Hence it doesn't happen very often and isn't something that someone can just decide to do.

    Just to give you some insight as to why the US system is as it is.

    1. Re:We don't have a Democracy by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Due to the way we choose the president, the system is heavily stacked to only have two parties.

      The way we choose members of Congress (and most state legislators and other elected officials) has a bigger effect than the way we choose Presidents; even with our Presidential election system, if minor parties didn't face an insurmountable task to win seats in the state and federal legislatures and in state executive offices, we'd still have multiple viable parties though they might have to form (likely temporary) coalitions for Presidential campaigns. And most of the barriers, outside of Presidential elections, could be addressed without Constitutional changes (those at the State level could be addressed without any federal law changes at all, which means that in the many states that have a citizen initiative process, they could be done without support from incumbent legislators.)

  50. Re:Vote for one of these (unless you're in FL or O by Legion303 · · Score: 1

    "Frankly, after visiting ISideWith.com, I was blown away at how congruent my views are with the Green candidate, Jill Stein."

    Every single person I've seen comment on that site has had the same results, leading me to question its neutrality. I voted for Stein anyway, not because I'm closely aligned with the Green platform, but because fuck Obomney.

  51. Live what your preaching by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are such a fucking whiny ass weasel.

    You live at home with your parents, and pitch about taxes.

    You probably don't fucking pay rent.

    Since you live at home with your parents, and can't deduct yourself or get tax credits, I'l bet you also rely on them for other financial support.

    No wonder you can't find a full time job with a masters, what's it in, art history?

    Don't you think its time to man-up and exercise that fiscal responsibility you mentioned elsewhere?

  52. Nadar cost us trillion $ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In 2000 Nadar's pitch was there was no difference between the two major parties. Thanks to him there are 5,000 more tombstones in military cemetaries and 10^12 $ in war debt to pay off.

    1. Re:Nadar cost us trillion $ by FoolishOwl · · Score: 1

      Both major parties supported the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. So no, there was no difference between the two major parties. The two major parties claim somewhat different domestic policies, but almost never actually differ on foreign policies.

  53. Voting for Gary. by allometry · · Score: 1

    I live in New Mexico and Gary has my vote.

    I'm tired of the whining in Washington and our government's sacred cows. Gary can't do shit to reform government directly, but at least he can put the fucking breaks on this non-sense from both sides.

    C'mon guys: time to redefine reasonable military costs, environmental spending and all the shit we're regulating.

    I have a metaphor: Gary is a new set of break-pads for this GM car speeding down the road of insanity, driven by an ass and an elephant!

    --
    http://www.allometry.com
    1. Re:Voting for Gary. by germansausage · · Score: 2

      brake. The word is spelled b-r-a-k-e.

    2. Re:Voting for Gary. by allometry · · Score: 1

      Thanks.

      I want a pass on that fail; I was taking NyQuil and was not in my mind.

      --
      http://www.allometry.com
  54. Re:Vote for one of these (unless you're in FL or O by ThatsMyNick · · Score: 1

    I sided with Johnson. I know people who sided with Romney too. The site seems to be valid to me.

  55. I refuse to vote for the lesser evil. by meeotch · · Score: 1

    Cthulhu 2012!

  56. one more debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you folks do know that Gary and Jill will be debating again Monday Night?

  57. Answer: Preferential Voting by mathew42 · · Score: 1

    Voting for a third party has much more value with Preferential Voting of which Instant-Runoff Voting is a much better system. I still don't understand why this system is not in more common use.

    Have a read of Votes are in and our plodding way of having a say wins in a landslide which gives an Australian perspective on the US election system. In any other country in the world the system would be roundly criticised

    .

  58. I'm Voting For Gary Johnson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would vote for Barack Obama like I did last time, but the guy wound up being not a whole lot different than Dick Cheney in terms of what he has actually done about issues that I really care about, like Guantanamo, making people take their shoes off and choose between backscatter radiation or having their genitals groped, killer drones, Habeas Corpus, and the Patriot act.

  59. I cannot endorse the murder of innocent people by FoolishOwl · · Score: 1

    I will not consider voting for anyone who supports the murder of innocent people. That is my absolute minimum standard for support for a political candidate. Since both major parties are fully committed to wars of aggression, I believe that voting for them is unconscionable. That leaves me with a choice of refusing to vote, or voting for a candidate that will not win. Since I like a lot of what Jill Stein has to say, I may as well vote for her. At least it slightly increases the odds of her message getting out.

  60. LOLOLOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Third-party candidates?

    LOL lol LOL lol LOL lol LOL lol LOL

  61. 3rd party voting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I removed my party affiliation (D) a year ago and voted 3rd party (L), Gary Johnson. This is my first time not voting for either R/D, and I find the whole experience to be extremely liberating (pardon the pun).

    This is in a "contested swing state" (FL, wasted vote, etc.) too. I don't care. I voted my conscience and it felt wonderful.

    I really wanted to vote Green, but their alignment with OWS made this impossible for me.

  62. Re:Four candidates, summarized by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    That's because you mispelled it. Rocky Anderson of the Justice Party.

  63. Subtlety will get you nowhere. by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

    I guess nobody knows who is Hugh Nanton Romney...

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  64. Nice argument by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 0

    But hey, if those countries are your worst example of strong government countries, then Somalia must be a paradise for you with a weak government. Or does republican logic as always work one way only?

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Nice argument by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Somalia is an example of vicious people forming gangs. Those gangs and their warlord leaders are proto-governments.

      Look, it takes more than size to make government bad, it takes bad people. But big government does attract people who want to use power over other people, and those people are bad. Smaller government gives them less scope for their evil.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  65. A pox on both Republican and Democratic parties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I live in a swing state. I saw a poll yesterday which showed Romney ahead but still within the margin of error and despite the fact that I am more right-leaning than left-leaning I would not trust Romney further than I could piss, but at the same time I cannot in good conscience vote for Obama. As someone said a vote for the lesser of 2 evils is still a vote for evil. (sorry, can't recall who to attribute that to).

    I know Gary Johnson won't win and I don't agree with everything he offers, but I'm going to vote for him anyway. This is a first for me. I've voted in 6 presidential elections prior to this, but this is the first time it wasn't a foregone conclusion where my state's electoral votes would go. I've thought long and hard about this and although I don't believe Romney will win and as much as I don't want him to win he has a real chance and maybe my vote will matter this time, but I'm not going to vote for Obama.

    This is turning out to be a really fucked up election. A poll 5 months ago showed that 61% of "likely voters" in my state (Colorado) were in favor of treating pot like we do alcohol and yet as the election looms there are self-proclaimed pro-pot legalizers who are against Amendment 64 because it supposedly does not go far enough. I'm not holding out much hope for that.

    There are 9 judges on my ballot and the only option is to "Retain" or "Do Not Retain". None of them have made any decisions that I am aware of so I Googled a few of them. Only one newspaper made editorial recommendations and they said to retain all of them although they mentioned a few reservations about a few of them. One "conservative" website said to "Not Retain" 3 of them, but they offered no explanation. WTF? They can't even offer an explanation? "Hey, just trust us. You should vote against certain people". And even if I agreed with their reasoning why should I believe they would be replaced by anyone "better"?

    I tried hard to find out why the GOP didn't like one of the judges and although I found 3 ostensibly "conservative" websites telling me to vote to not retain her, none of them offered any concrete objections as to why. I did find out that she was on a sentencing reform committee which maybe some pseudo-conservatives might find objectionable and I did find one decision which I was not pleased with although I had to agree that decision was probably right as the law is written and other judges who agreed with her had recommendations to retain them.

    It's genuinely a mystery to me and it offends me that so-called conservative websites just say vote the way we tell you to, don't ask why.

    I was tempted to vote the opposite of every recommendation for judges from these pseudo-conservative websites, but I decided to abstain instead since I really am not familiar with any of their decisions or their track record and I might actually agree that these judges should not retain their seats, but I have no knowledge regarding that.

    I just know I'll be grateful when this election is over. There has been nothing but mudslinging and lies perpetrated on me for the past few months. Fuck 'em. I carefully considered every choice on my ballot (except for most of the judges and unopposed candidates (2 of them)) and I will abstain from those) and I've cast my vote for Republicans, Democrats and Libertarians as I see fit.

    Anyone voting based solely on party affiliation is a fucking idiot. One Democratic candidate even said he was non-partisan, but the party was a way to "gain access". I voted against him not just because I thought that was disingenuous, but I disagreed with some of his positions.

  66. Still one more 3rd party debate tonight, Monday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Monday, Nov. 5, 9 p.m. ET at RT America's studio in Washington, DC, sponsored
    by the Free and Equal Elections Foundation (http://freeandequal.org), to be
    broadcast on the Green Party's Livestream Channel
    (http://www.livestream.com/greenpartyus) and the Free and Equal site.

  67. Re:Vote for one of these (unless you're in FL or O by Legion303 · · Score: 1

    I stand corrected.

  68. Hey, fucktard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    In the absence of a single freaking example of a libertarian country that is not a hell-hole like Somalia, we are forced to conclude that the redistributionist government is necessary for a healthy society

    An on-again, off-again Islamic hellhole run by a loose coalition of warlords, and racked by famine and periodic invasions from neighboring countries, is not a Libertarian state.

    What the hell are they teaching you kids in college these days, anyway? And where's that caramel macchiato I ordered 5 minutes ago?

  69. Re:Vote for one of these (unless you're in FL or O by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you click on the name, it provides context in platform and quotes as to why the candidate matches so you even know why it gave an answer.

    Maybe it is a sign that every person you've seen comment on the site were happy that it gave them someone other than the two primary candidates. Who would comment that 'yeah it gave me Obama'.

  70. Why not vote D or R? Two reasons: by RPI+Geek · · Score: 1

    1) I live in NY. My electors' votes will go to Obama so essentially my vote for POTUS doesn't count; feels bad, man.
    2) I want to send a message in the strongest possible way that the two-party system is broken, and the strongest way I can think to do so is with my vote.

    --

    - "Nobody came out that night, not one was ever seen. But Old Man Stauf is waiting there, crazy sick and mean!"
  71. Re:Four candidates, summarized by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Write-ins for CmdrTaco Movement?

  72. Re:Four candidates, summarized by orgenegro · · Score: 1

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocky_Anderson

    Must have just drafted this up in the last few minutes.

    Is that sufficiently less conservative than Reagan for you?

  73. Re:Four candidates, summarized by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A flawed summary. And it's Rocky you moron.

  74. Make sure your vote counts! by scorp1us · · Score: 1

    For a number of years now voting for a 3rd party has been labeled "throwing your vote away" however I have learned that this is a lie propagated by the two major parties. If a 3rd party candidate get 5% of the vote, they get easier access to be on the next election's ballot. So I suggest this voting strategy:

    If you are in a heavily blue or red state, please vote 3rd party, as there are enough people to carry the win for you if your are voting in line with the state's affiliation (red/blue). If you are in one of those heavily colored states and are voting opposition, vote 3rd party because nothing will come from your candidate losing by a narrower margin. (You actually *are* throwing your vote away.) However even if the 3rd party candidate loses, he still wins something, as long as he gets 5%, so your vote would have counted for something.

    If you're in a toss-up state, or a state which votes proportionally in the electoral college (Nebraska and Maine) then go on and decide the fate of the country. Your vote is worth more than anyone else's. But for the rest of the country, lets work to get a 3rd candidate in the debates and force cooperation between parties.

    --
    Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
  75. Re:Vote for one of these (unless you're in FL or O by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think the site is broken... It told me I side 96% with Johnson, and afterwards, reading about his position on the issues, I see that's quite correct.

  76. habeas corpus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obama is a lawyer and should know better. His failure to give the accused in Guantanamo their most elementary rights (such as habeas corpous) is the first item on my list of reasons. I voted for him in '08 (and Cobb in '04 and Nader in 2000), but I will now vote for Stein.

  77. What about this? by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

    I don't like the D candidate - he's a f'ing socialist. I don't like the R candidate - he's a f'ing elitist (as pointed out by my favorite in his own party). Both of them want to ruin the country financially (neither will balance the budget never mind reducing debt). Why on earth would I vote for either one? And which one should that be? You have 24 hours and one slashdot comment to win me over ;-)

  78. Just stop it! by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

    Why do so many people who like other parties ALWAYS TALK ABOUT POT! Dammit. even if you WON, a single president isn't going to legalize pot. All a 3rd party president could do is VETO stuff and talk. Every time you mention pot, you convince the independents that your candidate is the "weed" candidate, which is probably NOT why they don't like the R and D guys. Bring up other issues, bring up philosophy, but please try to suppress the urge to talk about pot - it doesn't matter if you call it "medial marijuana" it's still pot and your candidate is a long haired hippie.

    1. Re:Just stop it! by Raenex · · Score: 1

      All a 3rd party president could do is VETO stuff and talk.

      The President has a lot of power in who he appoints to run agencies and set agendas. If he wanted to stop the Feds from raiding states that have legalized, he could. A simple phone call would likely suffice.

      please try to suppress the urge to talk about pot - it doesn't matter if you call it "medial marijuana" it's still pot and your candidate is a long haired hippie.

      http://www.gallup.com/poll/150149/record-high-americans-favor-legalizing-marijuana.aspx

      50% of Americans now favor legalizing marijuana. Times are changing. We need to keep talking about it for change to happen.

  79. Re:Four candidates, summarized by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    That's because you mispelled it. Rocky Anderson of the Justice Party.

    Read the damned summary that slashdot posted. It says "Rock Anderson" not "Rocky Anderson". It's not my fault that slashdot cares so little about him as to not bother spelling his name correctly. I searched for the name provided by the summary.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  80. The lesser of two evils is still freakin' EVIL. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Voting for the lesser of two evils is still voting for evil. Vote for someone who supports your principles. Period. Democracy (or federal constitutional republican systems) cannot function properly otherwise.

    The fucked up government we have today is the direct result of people voting "for the lesser of two evils" for generations.

    There is no way on God's green earth that two parties who are so alike in practice (rhetoric doesn't count) can count as sufficient representatives of a very diverse population of hundreds of millions of people.

    We need more choices, badly.

  81. Re:Four candidates, summarized by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You do realize that Gary Johnson supports gay marriage rights, is pro-choice, is anti-war, and advocates drug legalization, right?

    I fail to see how that makes him a conservative. What crack are you smoking?

  82. Re:Four candidates, summarized by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    Gary Johnson supports gay marriage rights

    Actually, he just wants the government to "get out of marriage". Hence he supports gay marriage rights by not acknowledging any marriage rights.

    is pro-choice

    His official statement is something like "until the fetus is viable". Naturally that threshold will keep being adjusted down until eventually there is no more abortion.

    anti-war

    Again, you're not reading the full story, you're just taking your favorite sound bite. He doesn't want the US government going to war, because it costs money. However his platform will strip what little we have left of workers' rights, which will result in Texaco teaming up with United Defense and Coca-Cola to wage whatever war they like, with their employees as conscripted soldiers. Don't want to fight? Then no job for you!

    drug legalization

    They support that only to bring in tax revenue. Mainstream conservatives will eventually adopt that same idea for the same reason, as it allows them to place more taxes on people who make less money.

    I fail to see how that makes him a conservative

    I can't force you to actually read.

    What crack are you smoking?

    Are you going for some sort of irony award with that statement?

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  83. a better voting system then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Putting a X on one single candidate name ? What a broken system of voting.
    There is better, range voting. All the problems with "third candidates" can be solved.
    You just give a score (1 to 10) to the candidates you want. Still very simple.
    Mathematicians have been studying these kinds of problems. The solution is out there.
    It's simiar, but not identical, to the way decisions are taken in Debian community.
    Check it:
    http://rangevoting.org/

  84. Re:Why not vote D or R? Two reasons: by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

    ) I want to send a message in the strongest possible way that the two-party system is broken, and the strongest way I can think to do so is with my vote.

    Do you mean that the strongest way you can think of for a generic person, or for you specifically. Cause there are far stronger ways to do so. Leaving aside treason/armed rebellion, all you're left with is: Donating money. Signing petitions to get people on ballots/into debates. Appearing at rallies. Calling people/going door to door. Volunteering with the campaign.

    --
    Your ad here. Ask me how!
  85. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  86. Libertarian Party supporter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BUT, Florida, in its all empirical wisdom, brands all 3rd party voters as NPA!!!

    So, I'm buying more milsurp ammo, more long guns, some revolvers...

    and, thousands of rounds for each...

    Those Windoze Zombies and MacIntosh Applet freaks are coming, I tell you!

  87. Voters choose Electors by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    You're both wrong, from both a factual and procedural point of view.

    Actually, we're both right and you're wrong.

    PEOPLE vote for CANDIDATES.

    To the extent that's true, the "candidates" are the candidates for positions as electors, who are proposed by the parties and elected, in most states, as a statewide slate.

    People do not vote for electors. That's just wrong. That's not the way it works.

    Repeating an assertion four times in the same post doesn't make it true. Presidential elections are governed by State law. As a concrete example, here's the online index to the California Election Code. Note the title of Division 6, Part 2 ("ELECTIONS FOR PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS"). Now look at Chapter 1 of that Part, an particularly Section 6902: "At the general election in each leap year, or at any other time as may be prescribed by the laws of the United States, there shall be chosen by the voters of the state as many electors of President and Vice President of the United States as the state is then entitled to." (emphasis added)

    The voters are choosing slates of electors.

    1. Re:Voters choose Electors by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Okay. I'll concede California. I haven't considered it part of the actual United States for a long time anyway.

      How's that Prop. 35 coming?

    2. Re:Voters choose Electors by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Okay. I'll concede California. I haven't considered it part of the actual United States for a long time anyway.

      The same is true in every state. I just have where to find California law memorized, so it was the easiest example to present in detail. For instance, in North Carolina, votes for a named candidate on the ballot are legally votes for the electors nominated by that candidate's party (for a party candidate) or by that candidate (for an unaffiliated candidate), per North Carolina General Statutes Sec. 163-209:

      The names of candidates for electors of President and VicePresident nominated by any political party recognized in this State under G.S. 16396, or nominated under G.S. 1631(c) by a candidate for President of the United States who has qualified to have his or her name printed on the general election ballot as an unaffiliated candidate under G.S. 163122, shall be filed with the Secretary of State but shall not be printed on the ballot. In the case of the unaffiliated candidate, the names of candidates for electors must be filed with the Secretary of State no later than 12:00 noon on the first Friday in August. In place of their names, there shall be printed on the ballot the names of the candidates for President and VicePresident of each political party recognized in this State, and the name of any candidate for President who has qualified to have his or her name printed on the general election ballot under G.S. 163122. A candidate for President who has qualified for the general election ballot as an unaffiliated candidate under G.S. 163122 shall, no later than 12:00 noon on the first Friday in August, file with the State Board of Elections the name of a candidate for VicePresident, whose name shall also be printed on the ballot. A vote for the candidates named on the ballot shall be a vote for the electors of the party or unaffiliated candidate by which those candidates were nominated and whose names have been filed with the Secretary of State.

      What voters are choosing at the polls in a "Presidential election" is, as it is in every state, the slate of electors who will cast their State's electoral votes.

      How's that Prop. 35 coming?

      That's a weird non-sequitur, but election results are available online.