• BeautifulMind ♾️
    link
    fedilink
    English
    44
    edit-2
    9 months ago

    It’s so wild that the ‘but the people have democratic rights to choose among candidates’ crowd invoke that argument to make the candidate that’s promised to end democracy and rights one of the options they can vote for

    You know, because democracy

    • @Wilzax@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      219 months ago

      And also, he never won on the people’s democratic right to choose among candidates. Hillary did. He won because the president is chosen by the states, not the people. Don’t like it? Abolish the electoral college.

      • @upandatom@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        -169 months ago

        Abolish electoral college is not the answer to these issues. Unless you have a new idea in mind. Electoral college is better than using popular vote. It helps prevent fraud from any one particular state.

        • @Kite_height@eviltoast.org
          link
          fedilink
          English
          49 months ago

          How so? And does that outweigh the negatives and weaknesses we’ve seen in the electoral college system over the past 2 election cycles?

          • @upandatom@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            19 months ago

            I was mostly curious those that want to abolish it what their alternative solution is.

            Under popular vote, DeSantis is still running and maybe now he gets 63 billion votes from Florida alone. The impact of this fraud (there are not 63 billion ppl voting in Florida) is bigger with no electoral college.

            Other countries don’t have EC bc other counties don’t have our state and government structure.

            Yall do you. I’m not very political anyway.

        • @Gabu@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          19 months ago

          Except this assinine system only exists in 'murica, which also happens to be the country where democracy doesn’t work.

    • BeautifulMind ♾️
      link
      fedilink
      English
      1
      edit-2
      8 months ago

      Also it occurs to me that there are other factors that disqualify candidates from being president- the bit about being 35 or older means AOC can’t be president right now and the bit about being a natural-born citizen disqualifies Schwarzenegger and isn’t it interesting that the court hasn’t taken up the issue on how that denies voters their democratic rights? I mean, when you want to understand how to apply the constitution as it pertains to who may not serve in office, don’t you want to consider all the disqualifiers and their mechanisms?

      If you’re under 35 or foreign-born, it doesn’t take an act of congress to bar you from office, those things are the law and already in the constitution with plain wording. A plain reading of sec 3 of the 14th amendment basically reads as if the authors of the amendment intended it to take an act of congress (with 2/3rds majorities, in both houses) to allow an insurrectionist that previously took an oath of office to serve again, but the court magically inverted that by asserting the only congress could invoke section 3

      Nope, this is the court bending over backwards to deliver a political outcome