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I wonder if anyone asked to see his passport when he landed in Afghanistan today?
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Even though a state like Wyoming might have less population than the city of San Jose CA, it deserves attention
While it seems great on the surface that "majority wins," the problem is that the strategy for winning would be to start marketing at the biggest cities and work your way down. It wouldn't take much, in that respect, to get to the 50% + 1.
Even though a state like Wyoming might have less population than the city of San Jose CA, it deserves attention
Which makes perfect sense. Biggest cities = more of the people. Government is of the people, for the people. More population should mean more representation.
It deserves attention in proportion with the number of people it has. Thus, it "deserves" less attention than the city of San Jose. Government isn't representing land mass...it's representing people. If there was a state with 1 person in it, it would deserve plenty of representation?
The electoral college makes the votes of people in small states worth more than the votes of people in larger states, because they get disproportionate representation. That's quite counter to the democratic ideal of one person, one (equal) vote.
No, govt. is of the people BUT no tyranny of the masses. People in cities have very different interests and issues than people in urban areas.
And govt. sure is interested in the less populated land.
Not a tyranny, no. That's what the Constitution (and Bill of Rights) is for. Majority vote can't abridge rights of others. Majority rules on non-Constitutionally-protected issues, though.
Interested in it is quite a bit different than representing it. Government does nothing about land mass for the happiness of the land mass. It does things with/about land because people want that. Your examples aren't counters to what I said, they're still examples of government representing people, not land mass.
Government TAKES from those people in Utah
Utah taxpayers receive more federal funding per dollar of federal taxes paid than the average state. Per dollar of Federal tax collected in 2005, Utah citizens received approximately $1.07 in the way of federal spending. This ranks the state 29th highest nationally and represents a decline from 1995 when Utah received $1.08 per dollar of taxes in federal spending (ranked 22nd nationally). Neighboring states and the amount of federal spending received per dollar of federal taxes collected were: Idaho ($1.21), Nevada ($0.65), Arizona ($1.19), New Mexico ($2.03), Colorado ($0.81), and Wyoming ($1.11).
Wrong.
barfo
You do realize that the entire state of Utah has about 2.7M population. Getting back $1.07 for so few (relative) tax dollars paid doesn't prove what you seem to think it does.
To recover the $1T value of the land TAKEN by the feds, it'd take 1,111 years at $900M/year.
You suggested that Utah somehow gets back more than its fair share, the 1.7M acre land grab notwithstanding.
And I ask, how is the US designating some of it's property a national monument a "land grab"?
Yes, Utah gets back more than its fair share. As do most of the red states.
barfo
And I ask, how is the US designating some of it's property a national monument a "land grab"?
Yes, Utah gets back more than its fair share. As do most of the red states.
barfo
Are you really that dumb? Anything, ANYTHING done by a President of the USA who is a member of the Democratic party is evil and corrupt.
The best thing this country can do is next election if you vote for a Republican you get a free gun. If you vote for a Democrat you get a target tattooed on your forehead.
I don't have a gripe with Clinton's executive order, just that the state wasn't duly compensated.
Certain plots of land were assigned when Utah became a state (in 1896) as School and Institutional Trust Lands (SITLa, a Utah state agency), to be managed to produce funds for the state school system. These lands included scattered plots in the Monument that, critics claimed, could no longer be developed for the sake of Utah's school children. The SITLa plots within the Monument were exchanged for federal lands elsewhere in Utah, plus equivalent mineral rights and $13 million dollars cash by an act of Congress, the Utah Schools and Lands Exchange Act of 1998, supported by Democrats and Republicans, and signed into law as Public Law 105-335 on October 31, 1998
I don't have a gripe with Clinton's executive order, just that the state wasn't duly compensated.
Sounds to me like Utah was duly compensated.
barfo
We're a Republic, not a Democracy, exactly for the reasons I've stated (taking without equal representation).
If you think your argument has merit, then argue why there should be a senate at all.
Tyranny of the majority in action.
In a move meant to provoke a legal challenge over limits placed on federally controlled land in Utah, lawmakers there passed a bill last week giving the state power to seize national forests and other federal lands for development.
Can't birthers just be idiots without being racist? I don't see the connection between some crazy ass conspiracy theory and hating black people.
It's not either/or, it's both. And the fact that it's a republic is true, but fairly antiquated at this point, IMO. This is no longer some loose confederacy of largely sovereign states. So, really, I guess my response is...who cares?
As far as "taking without equal representation," you're right...but still in my favour. The states that get the most taken by the federal government are generally the larger states. And they don't have equal representation, as I've pointed out...a vote in a larger state is worth proportionally less than a vote in a smaller state.
I don't think there should be a Senate.
I agree. While there is surely some overlap between the two groups, the demographic seems to me to be different. On the one hand you've got the conspiracy theorists sitting at home in their underwear in their mom's basement typing on the internets, and on the other hand you've got the racists out crawling through the woods with their 2nd amendment rifles and their 1st amendment swastika face tattoos.
barfo
Surely you jest. Sounds to me like Utah is trying to steal land from the USA.
You started out accusing the US of a "land grab". Now the facts come out that it is quite the opposite. Yet apparently you support a land grab as long as it is Utah doing it. Explain.
barfo
California 55 electoral votes / 30M = 1.8e-6
Utah 5 electoral votes / 2.8M = 1.8e-6
Wyoming 1 electoral vote / 570K = 1.8e-6
That would be your representation in the house of representatives as well.
Your numbers are off.
California: 55 electoral votes / 36,961,664 = 1.48e-6
Utah: 5 electoral votes / 2,784,572 = 1.79e-6
Wyoming: 3 electoral votes / 544,270 = 5.51e-6
Sources:
http://www.fec.gov/pages/elecvote.htm
U.S. Census Bureau, Population Division via Google Public Data
As you can see, the smaller the state, the larger the influence of each individual vote. In the case of Wyoming, the disparity is massive.
So, no, this wouldn't be the representation in the House, if representation were proportional to population.
You're talking about millionths of a representative here. Large influence indeed.
