Electoral college training --

Discussion in 'Politics' started by ghrit, Nov 17, 2016.


  1. ghrit

    ghrit Bad company Administrator Founding Member

    DARRELL HUCKABY:

    Take a seat — history class is in session


    · By Darrell Huckaby

    dhuck008@gmail.com


    [​IMG]


    Goodness gracious sakes alive, does this country need a history lesson! Never in the past four years have I wanted so badly to have a class of people to teach. Teenagers or adults or senior citizens — it wouldn’t have mattered. I have seen so much appalling ignorance about our country, its history and its constitution that I have just wanted to grab the populace and shake them until they understood.

    For starters, I am tired of hearing about our democracy and the popular vote. We are not a democracy, and a whole lot of people should be really glad about that, too, because in a democracy, mob rule applies. The majority is the boss of everybody, and if we had been a democracy in 1865 slavery would have never been abolished. If we had been a democracy in 1920, the women would have never gotten the vote. If we had been a democracy in 1964 and 1965, those historic pieces of civil rights legislation would never have been approved. In fact, if we had been a democracy in 1776, the Declaration of Independence would never have been adopted because the majority of the colonists were afraid to pursue independence, just like a majority of Americans opposed women’s suffrage and abolition and sweeping civil rights reform.

    For the record, Abraham Lincoln did not get a majority of the popular vote in 1860, and Bill Clinton did not get a majority of the popular vote in 1992 or 1996.

    “Oh, yes he did!” screamed one of my Facebook friends this week. “I know Lincoln got the most votes and so did Clinton.”

    Most means plurality, y’all. A majority is 50 percent plus one. And while we are on the subject, we are not a democratic republic, either, no matter what the revisionist history books might claim. That’s just a term Andrew Jackson coined for political purposes in the 1820s and it stuck with some people. We are a republic. We have a federalist form of government where the power is supposed to be divided between the states and the central government and neither is subservient to the other. Both are supposed to get their powers directly from the people.

    And by the way, the U.S. Constitution does not give any of us the right to have a say so in who becomes president of the United States. Oh, no, it doesn’t. That power is vested entirely in the Electoral College, and under the Constitution states still have the authority to decided how those electors are chosen. It wasn’t until 1842 that the last state started allowing the people to vote for those electors.

    If we eliminated the Electoral College people in two-thirds of the states would be virtually disenfranchised when it came to presidential elections. All the time, money and effort would be spent wooing voters in California, New York and Florida.

    Now about the transition of power. Political parties are not mentioned in the Constitution and were thought to be a dangerous thing by our founders. But parties arose almost immediately because people have always had differences of opinions about political issues. The first 12 years under the Constitution found the government in the hands of the Federalist Party. But in the election of 1800 — also called the Revolution of 1800 — Thomas Jefferson, leader of the Republican Party, was chosen to be president. When John Adams, his Federalist opponent, stepped down on inauguration day in 1801, it marked the first time in the history of the world that a group in power had relinquished power without violence or threat of violence, simply because the people said that’s what they wanted. It has worked that way ever since.

    And now the people have spoken and the message is loud and clear, under the Constitution, that the people want this country to go in a new direction. And no matter how much they hated to do so, Hillary and Bill Clinton, Joe Biden, and President Obama did and said all the right things this week to propel us toward that smooth transition.

    And yet in many of our nation’s cities, ignorant young people who have no knowledge of how this Republic is supposed to work are dying to get attention by marching in the streets and generally acting the fool — and, no, these are not the peaceful protests guaranteed by the First Amendment. You must have a grievance to protest. These are spoiled brats and attention-seekers and they should be ashamed.

    And if you are interested, I have about 38 years worth of lessons stored up. Class can start as soon as everyone gets here.
     
  2. Motomom34

    Motomom34 Monkey+++

    Tully Mars, Yard Dart, Ura-Ki and 2 others like this.
  3. Bandit99

    Bandit99 Monkey+++ Site Supporter+

    @Motomom34 You educated me on what a 'cupcake' is but what's a 'snowflake?'
     
  4. DarkLight

    DarkLight Live Long and Prosper - On Hiatus

    All those kids that were raised to believe that they were "special little snowflakes", precious to their very core. Unique and priceless, to be treasured...sorry, just threw up on myself...gotta go clean up.
     
  5. 3M-TA3

    3M-TA3 Cold Wet Monkey

    Also because they are fragile and meltdown as soon as they feel any heat...
     
    Motomom34 and Ura-Ki like this.
  6. ghrit

    ghrit Bad company Administrator Founding Member

    And more background. From Origins of the Electoral College

    "The Founders envisioned a system of presidential elections that would have curbed the rise of mass democracy and the loss of liberty it invites, but in designing the rules for elections, they left much to the discretion to the states. If they had clearly specified the non-democratic procedure they had envisioned for presidential elections, that would have gone a great way toward insulating the presidency from the demands of popular opinion, and would have furthered the cause of liberty that they tried so hard to embody in the Constitution."
     
    3M-TA3 likes this.
  7. chimo

    chimo the few, the proud, the jarhead monkey crowd

    I made a snowflake explode yesterday. He was going off about how the supreme court should "rule the electoral college unconstitutional". I pulled my handy-dandy pocket Constitution from my desk and showed him how it was not only called for in the Constitution, but how it was changed...twice...via amendment. He thought it was created by George Bush to steal the election from Al Gore. Idiocrats, meet em everywhere.
     
    3M-TA3 likes this.
  8. ghrit

    ghrit Bad company Administrator Founding Member

    Poor innocent snowflake, deprived of lessons in civics while growing up.
     
    3M-TA3 likes this.
  9. Ganado

    Ganado Monkey+++

    Electoral College (United States) - Wikipedia
    Nomination

    Candidates for elector are nominated by state chapters of nationally oriented political parties in the months prior to Election Day. In some states, the electors are nominated by voters in primaries, the same way other presidential candidates are nominated. In some states, such as Oklahoma, Virginia and North Carolina, electors are nominated in party conventions. In Pennsylvania, the campaign committee of each candidate names their respective electoral college candidates (an attempt to discourage faithless electors). Varying by state, electors may also be elected by state legislatures, or appointed by the parties themselves.[42]
     
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