Let me put it this way - the guys who beat up the high school girl who supported trump and ended up hurting her = trump is not responsible.
However this is a broader subject...
It's... I mean, that's a completely different subject, isn't it?
Let me put it this way - the guys who beat up the high school girl who supported trump and ended up hurting her = trump is not responsible.
However this is a broader subject...
Seriously though, can we, as women, maybe not try to speak for other women in the realm of weaknesses? It perpetuates so much doubt in women. If you, personally, feel that you would not make a good President due to lack of emotional control, I respect that. But why try to take the ability away from other women? Like, I can't kick a ball to save my life, but that doesn't mean there aren't amazing female soccer players. I'm not brainy enough to be an engineer, but that doesn't mean plenty of other women aren't. I don't have a right to represent the female sporting ability or thinking ability just because I have a vagina. You don't have a right to represent women's emotional control just because you have one either. We need to drop the divisive nonsense.
How... how did we get here? Did you just want to change topics or do you think this is a relevant response to the topic at hand?Let me put it this way - the ppl who beat up the high school girl because she supported trump and they ended up hurting her = trump is not responsible for that just cause he said something in his speech someone does not agree with.
However this is a broader subject...
Do you imagine a man whining like this over "muh feelings"?
Yes men can easier detach from emotions. Can you? Cause rating my post disagree when I say family life handling not same as terrorism handling makes no sense. Do you really think is same? Lol. Seriously.
Not sure how a group of reporting entities can get the facts so wrong?
They didn't. They told you exactly what they wanted you to believe.
I hear ya, but, there is a big part of me that remembers news reporting the facts.
I'm afraid that world hasn't existed for some time now.
Not American so my perspective is a bit different. I like Jill Stein's politics generally but I likely would vote for Bernie, or Hillary if she wins the nomination, because it seems to be a two-party race and it feels like "throwing a vote away" to vote for a candidate/party that has no chance. I dislike that system, and I understand that if everyone voted how they wanted it might be different, but from practical perspective I'd rather vote in a strategic manner.
It was similar during the Canadian election; for NDP voters, the Liberals were seen as the better chance for voting out the Conservatives (at least towards the end of the election). So a lot of people I know changed their votes from NDP to Liberal, partially because PM Trudeau said he would change the voting process in the future (but we'll see.
For Canadian elections I feel my involvement is an 8, for American elections maybe a 3-4? I follow along with what's going on but obviously since I can't vote I don't participate, and my perspective is a bit different - of course the American elections affect every country, but my desires/priorities for American politics would then be different than those of someone who actually lives there, to a point.
Of course I am available for marriage to any Americans unhappy with your new President although if the Democrats win, probably Republicans would not like Canada so much, haha.
I was really feeling Jill Stein as well. I voted for her. In my heart I knew she probably would not win, but I voted for what I felt strongly about what she stood for. I wish more people would vote for who they actually like. Maybe then America would see the best change for the people if someone that is down to earth and in touch with the people got elected in office.
The thread is "who are you voting for." Well the votin's pretty much done at this point. Just waiting on the electoral college now to vote and hope they don't get a bunch of idiots voting the wrong way so hillary still wins it. So what else we got to do?So now this thread is basically men vs women, way to devolve.
I also voted for Jill Stein. I've always wondered what it would be like if there was no "but you HAVE to vote for one of the two!" narrative. A first past the post voting system naturally tends to fall to two parties at a certain point, though.
By the way, everyone... This is a really great video about why the First Past the Post system is flawed.
It's surprising to hear sex workers voted for Jill, since the Green Party has a pretty scary stance on sex workers
Confused. Hillary already conceded and the vote is final, isn't it?Just waiting on the electoral college now to vote and hope they don't get a bunch of idiots voting the wrong way so hillary still wins it. So what else we got to do?
Confused. Hillary already conceded and the vote is final, isn't it?
PITTSBURGH (CBS) — After Donald Trump was proclaimed the winner of the 2016 presidential election, there have been protests sprouting up in pockets across the country.
Now, an online petition has been started asking the electoral college to, when they meet on December 19, withhold their support for Trump, something granted to them in the Constitution.
Though Clinton leads the popular vote by about 280,000 as of Thursday morning, Trump has won the minimum of 270 electoral votes necessary to be elected president. He has 290 to Clinton’s 228.
According to the Constitution, electors will meet in their respective state capitals on Dec. 19. In most cases, whoever wins the popular vote gains all of that state’s electoral votes.
The number of electoral votes per state is determined by the number of congressional districts plus one for each senator — a total of 538.
But as the New York Times points out, there is nothing in the Constitution that would prevent any of the electors from refusing to support the candidate who won their state, or from abstaining. They are dubbed a “faithless elector,” though 29 states ban the practice.
The Times says faithless electors have never affected the final result of any presidential election and there haven’t been many in modern times.
The last time was in 2004, when an anonymous elector in Minnesota cast his vote for John Edwards instead of the Democratic candidate, John Kerry.
The foundation for the petition is the fact that Hillary Clinton won the popular vote, something that Trump himself has complained about in the past.
Here’s an excerpt from the petition:
“We are calling on the Electors to ignore their states’ votes and cast their ballots for Secretary Clinton. Why?
Mr. Trump is unfit to serve. His scapegoating of so many Americans, and his impulsivity, bullying, lying, admitted history of sexual assault, and utter lack of experience make him a danger to the Republic.
Secretary Clinton WON THE POPULAR VOTE and should be President.”
In 2012 after Barack Obama defeated Mitt Romney, Trump tweeted on the matter: “He lost the popular vote by a lot and won the election. We should have a revolution in this country!” The tweet has since been deleted.
As of 6pm EST on Thursday, November 10, the petition has more than a million signatures.
Caucuses, delegates and electoral college all sound like a boatload of hootinanny to me.Common misconception. The voting by citizens is done. But that isn't what elects a president. The people we send to the electoral college then place their votes for the president. THEY elect a president. They take an oath to vote the way their states population votes. However there is no law requiring them to do so.
So if an electoral college voter should decide to break their oath and vote a different way...it sticks. Right now if about 20 electoral college voters decided they could not vote for Trump, and voted for Hillary instead, she's the President.
The odds are exceedingly slim that would happen. However someone has done it in the past, and his vote stayed as such as a matter of record. There is precedent.
Read more here.
http://pittsburgh.cbslocal.com/2016/11/10/clinton-electoral-college/
It's an eye opener. But it makes you realize in concrete terms. We do NOT have a democracy, we have a republic. You do not vote for president, and in the end your vote could be meaningless under our system. It's only a promise by those we send to the electoral college that keeps it all in check.
I don't understand why she conceded before he even hit 270. My guesses are embarrassment or trying to create a peace that won't be here anytime soon. Either way, those seem like pretty pitiful reasons after such a brutal fight. Is there a better real reason she would do this? It's kind of hard to argue that she should be installed as the winner of the popular vote when she was so quick to throw her hands up.
It's a complicated system for sure. I think it's just part of the checks and balances the founding fathers wanted to put in place everywhere they could think of.Caucuses, delegates and electoral college all sound like a boatload of hootinanny to me.
The number of electoral votes per state is determined by the number of congressional districts plus one for each senator — a total of 538.
Do you think this does not exist? I invite you to check out all of the history of millions of songs, books, films, TV shows, plays with men whining about their feelings. Or like...go on the internet for a bit.
Men have feelings. I know, bizarre concept. Women do as well. It's sort of a human thing. Emotions.
Men have feelings too, of course, the point we are debating though is what each sex does with those feelings. While most women are frequently overwhelmed by their feelings and do embarrassing displays of emotion publicly, like the Hillary supporters above, most men tend to save those feelings for another, more appropriate time like those times when you are writing songs or writing in your diary.