My vote is going to the candidate that will make the country so bad that there is no choice other than action.
Yeah, Hitler wasn't thaaaat bad.
Edit: oh boy, pageflip
My vote is going to the candidate that will make the country so bad that there is no choice other than action.
Nah, they have a rules meeting I think. The rules probably change a bit between elections.The depressing part is this will never be brought up again until next election and nobody will change it. 4 year cycles re-enforce a lot of the broken parts of our stupid voting system through forgetfulness.
And that process is flawed. It does not show Bernie's lead adequately.
Logical as in concept logic not math logic.
This pretty strange because it almost gives the impression that the Democrat Party does not trust it's constituency.
The irony is that no one complained when near losses resulted in Bernie picking up more delegates than he should if we were rounding.
Nor is anyone complaining he's got more delegates proportionally than he has votes.
The system's only broken when it's not working for you, I guess.
So Hillary should get more delegates then as she has more votes total. Bernie then loses from your argument.
The irony is that no one complained when near losses resulted in Bernie picking up more delegates than he should if we were rounding.
Nor is anyone complaining he's got more delegates proportionally than he has votes.
The system's only broken when it's not working for you, I guess.
I'd be fine with scrapping all that bullshit even if it meant my guy lost. It's antithetical to democracy. But at the same time, we should have debates on days that people won't obviously be distracted by majorly important TV happenings. And have more of them.
Let's just say a lot of the same faces appear at all these things. OWS greased the wheels for a new generation of progressive activists, the kind of which we haven't had in decades. Again, if you don't see it, it's probably because you weren't there, and are going off of some detached narrative about them.
The source of this issue is that there's not one poll for fourteen delegates here, there's three. There's one poll for eight delegates, one poll for four delegates, one poll for two delegates. In Wyoming, it happens that all three votes are contested using the same vote, and in each of those Bernie did not get a sufficiently statistically significant enough win to gain an extra delegate.Read my last posts. I'm doing it with Math so it alligns with Bernie's win.
I'm so confused.
Isn't this exactly exactly the same as saying Clinton has a 700 delegate lead? The number includes superdelegates and isn't the one that should be reported.
If a person reported the real number they both won 7 delegates in Wyoming, which while not ideal given his % win, is less sensationalist.
What the hell people.
I think that's precisely the issue as many see it, though.
Where?What's annoying and tending to spread FUD is when people are selectively choosing when and when not to include superdelegates when using the general term "delegates". As in:
"It's totally fair, Bernie and Hillary both won 7 delegates", while also saying a few hours earlier, "Bernie is behind by 700 delegates, he should just give it up already".
The errors in perception that it causes isn't really fair, to be honest.
(Yeah yeah strawman and all, but I do hear it a lot).
Tell that to 2008It's rigged in the sense that the system is set up to heavily favor the party leaders choice. It's made to give the illusion that primary voters matter.
It's rigged in the sense that the system is set up to heavily favor the party leaders choice. It's made to give the illusion that primary voters matter.
It's rigged in the sense that the system is set up to heavily favor the party leaders choice. It's made to give the illusion that primary voters matter. It's set up to work like this.
It's rigged in the sense that the system is set up to heavily favor the party leaders choice. It's made to give the illusion that primary voters matter. It's set up to work like this.
The depressing part is this will never be brought up again until next election and nobody will change it. 4 year cycles re-enforce a lot of the broken parts of our stupid voting system through forgetfulness.
Yes. I don't understand why people arguing against this system have to be Bernie supporters.
The source of this issue is that there's not one poll for fourteen delegates here, there's three. There's one poll for eight delegates, one poll for four delegates, one poll for two delegates. In Wyoming, it happens that all three votes are contested using the same vote, and in each of those Bernie did not get a sufficiently statistically significant enough win to gain an extra delegate.
For what you're asking for, you have to answer the very important question of which poll do you take that extra delegate for Bernie from? That's not insignificant, there are actual people attached to all this.
Amusingly, the issue stems largely from, well, democracy - every state has its delegates assigned using the same rulebook, and tiny single-disctrict states end up looking a bit odd as a result. It's a discrepancy at the low level that exists in part to keep representation feeling more consistent at the high level - in a more populous state there would be more likelihood of this making a multiple-delegate difference - and that's deemed a necessary sacrifice because well, it's one delegate.
So the system is rigged when it benefits Hillary but when it goes in the opposite direction and benefits Sanders (Nevada) there was silence in OT.
So the system is rigged when it benefits Hillary but when it goes in the opposite direction and benefits Sanders (Nevada) there was silence in OT.
Trump was saying the same thing recently about Cruz, it might have been Colorado
I would take one delegate from the first poll. Problem solved.
Personally, I find it amusing that Sanders keeps winning at second caucuses even when Clinton won on the first one. Hillary caucus voters not showing up, or switching to the Bern(likely the former than latter).
Yeah, Hitler wasn't thaaaat bad.
Edit: oh boy, pageflip
(This will probably happen again in Rhode Island on the 26th too).
So you should round Bernie's share of the vote up to 62.5%? That's adding more "rounding numbers bullshit". I wonder what the delegate you're stripping of the role as a result would think of that?
Wins can be statistically insignificant. It's quite likely in small states. It's not a disaster.
(The correct answer, I'd say, is to tie an odd number of delegates to that poll. But that's not something you can justify after the event)
People are bored so they make leading, inaccurate threads and then people argue the premise down until it becomes surly, and it's typically not the Bernie crowd by what I've seen.
You misunderstand. I'm saying I would attribute one delegate to Sanders so it becomes 8 to 6.
So when Caucuses rules benefit Sanders in some states, they are happy with it.
But when caucus rules in the least populous state with the fewest delegates end up splitting 50 50 over peanuts = they cry
You misunderstand. I'm saying I would attribute one delegate to Sanders so it becomes 8 to 6.
But it's actually 2 year cycles for voting. If people really cared they could vote in people to change it every 2 years. They don't care until their guy loses though.
Yes, which is effectively rounding his vote up to 62.5%.