page two of NONE OF YOUR DAMN BUSINESS
11/2/2012 8:38:03 AM
suspend this dude because we sure as fuck can't fix this bug in TWW
11/2/2012 8:38:20 AM
11/2/2012 8:48:14 AM
but... you're essentially casting a vote for the major party candidate that you agree with leastit just shows a lack of understanding of the two party system
11/2/2012 8:57:47 AM
11/2/2012 9:01:29 AM
I see nothing wrong with people voting third party and do not consider it "throwing away" a vote. This country is not about pressuring people to vote one way or another even if the media and politicians would like you to think it is. When you leave the voting booth you should feel like you voted for the person that YOU thought would best run the country--not the "lesser of two evils" between Republicans and Democrats. This is the point of democracy.
11/2/2012 9:07:11 AM
^I can agree with that, but I also think everyone needs to go into the polls with that attitude, and honestly, I don't see that happening. If I thought a 3rd party candidate could possibly even pull 10-15% of the vote, I would consider voting for him if (s)he were my preferred candidate, but until I think that will happen, I will put my vote in for the person that I think will do the most for the country and actually has a chance at winning.
11/2/2012 9:16:37 AM
Valid point when considering the fact that people don't think that way. But I maintain that it's a self perpetuating phenomenon. People need to just tighten up and man up.
11/2/2012 9:18:37 AM
the ONLY purpose in voting for a third-party candidate is to deprive the most closely aligned of the two major parties a votefor example, you have:gary johnson - libertarian partyjill stein - green partyrocky anderson - justice partyvirgil goode - constitution partya vote for the last two is a vote against the republicans...a vote for the green is a vote against democrats, and i'd say a vote for libertarian is a vote against both (though still moreso against the republicans)anyone with a shade of common sense realizes that not a single one of those people are going to be elected president...they are nobodiesso unless you are specifically voting to deprive one (or both) of the two main parties a vote, you ARE throwing away your vote
11/2/2012 9:24:29 AM
11/2/2012 9:38:14 AM
11/2/2012 9:55:56 AM
The people telling you not to vote for a 3rd party are only concerned that their team is going to lose.
11/2/2012 10:14:26 AM
I would argue that a very large percentage of voters have no idea who they're voting for and don't really know whether they agree with their chosen candidate at all beyond a few issues highlighted on TV. These are the people that did their research by watching those "debates" and listening to major news outlets, of course influenced by the similarly-formed opinions of their friends and family. This isn't likely to change for the majority of voters so the only way to get media coverage of other candidates is for Americans to demonstrate significant interest thereof. It's not something that's likely to change next few elections but over time this notion of D v R in American politics could be eroded. I do wholly agree with your second point, but I don't see the harm in holding subsequent elections after others are eliminated to achieve that goal. We're choosing the president, for Christ's sake, maybe we should take that seriously. I realize that is loosely akin to what happens now, without the actual first election stage(s), but with the key difference that no one actually got a chance to vote for the best contenders (beyond partisan primaries). If we had that initial spread in viable candidates, instead of letting potentially good candidates get eliminated at the party level or crazy shit like Ron Paul running for the R nomination, perhaps the walking farces that are Romney and Obama wouldn't be our only options. Sorry for the terrible thought flow here but I'm highly distracted atm
11/2/2012 10:25:53 AM
Voted for Romney. Romney will win.
11/2/2012 10:31:28 AM
Make all the candidates debate up front in several televised group, regular season debates set in their designated region of the country. Then in March of election year, everyone goes to vote at the end of the regular season and ranks their top 8 national candidates regardless of party. On Selection Sunday, the top 8 candidates will be revealed based on points from everyone's rankings with respective seeds of 1-8. In years where an incumbent is eligible to run again, you are automatically required to rank them somewhere 1-8. The elite 8 and the semi-finals each consist of 2 months worth of campaigning and debates for the paired candidates. In the final debate of each round, the higher seeded candidate of the pair gets the closing statement. Voters choose who goes on to the next round by national popular vote.For the finals, we have 4 months of campaigning and debates between the 2 remaining candidates until election day./notserious
11/2/2012 10:50:52 AM
yeah, yeah...jerk.
11/2/2012 10:59:15 AM
I'm just kidding I'm voting 3rd party and agree with your overall sentiment.
11/2/2012 11:00:19 AM
I voted mostly Republican for the first time in my life, but I did vote for Obama/Biden.Winner: Obama/Biden
11/2/2012 11:03:13 AM
11/2/2012 1:23:51 PM
I would love to be able to vote for a strong 3rd party. But there's not one 3rd party candidate who's coming off strong. Until there is major reform and we dump the 2 party system, I still maintain that a vote for a 3rd party candidate right now is a wasted vote. Pick the candiate from the 2 major parties that you're most aligned with, and hope they win, and help them win.
11/2/2012 1:34:44 PM
I don't think I'll vote
11/2/2012 1:52:54 PM
^ if you're only going to vote for a third-party (and no other offices at all), you might as well not
11/2/2012 2:04:53 PM
11/2/2012 2:08:24 PM
11/2/2012 2:12:13 PM
i have never met a person so unashamedly vocal in their retarded conspiracy theories as GeniuSxBoY
11/2/2012 2:13:51 PM
11/2/2012 2:16:23 PM
11/2/2012 2:23:38 PM
step 1) voting reformstep 2) voting your conscienceThis system doesn't provide an incentive for voting your conscience. The fault doesn't lie with the voters, it lies with a voting system that has fucked up incentives. We need a system that doesn't encourage strategic voting that inevitably leads to 2-parties; blaming voters themselves is tantamount to expecting them to throw away elections for very doubtful gain.
11/2/2012 2:30:02 PM
What candidate can i vote for who is likely to enact legislation to allow for voter reformIm krallum and i approvedthis message
11/2/2012 2:32:16 PM
no single candidate can/will do iti don't know the details, but things like the electoral college (which is a component of voting reform), would require a constitutional amendment (and therefore a 2/3 congressional majority...so yeah, not gonna happen)even if nothing else requires an amendment (though i suspect that's the case), there would need to be strong bi-partisan support...and they're certainly not going to work to make it harder for them to get electedtl;dr - not gonna happen
11/2/2012 2:45:07 PM
^^None now.The vote really doesn't count in every meaning of the word. You cannot change the system through voting any longer, they have completely decimated the republic part of the voting process in the last National Convention by not adhering to rules they had in place and adding new ones without consent of the delegates.Nothing short of a revolution can save us now. ]
11/2/2012 2:45:52 PM
you are one dumb motherfuckera vote for one of the big two matters at least some as it is a SUGGESTION to the electoral college on how to vote...and if the electoral delegates don't vote as they're "supposed" to, they'd be dropped and replaced by someone who wouldso yeah, despite your dumbshit belief that the election is "rigged" and the winner has been predetermined, a vote for mitt or obama mattersyour vote for ANYONE else matters not one iota because they'll just ignore you
11/2/2012 2:48:06 PM
Tell me about your thoughts on contributors quagmireIm krallum and i approved this message
11/2/2012 2:51:31 PM
11/2/2012 2:59:09 PM
11/2/2012 3:02:48 PM
I'll be getting slightly off topic here, but mr. geniusxboy - if you want to call me ignorant, then list out Gary Johnson's platform with your next post. With a straight face.
11/2/2012 3:26:19 PM
I hear so many people say that they would vote for a 3rd party candidate if they thought there was a chance of them winning. If all these voters actually voted their conscious instead of being swindled into the two party mindset, we would see some real change. Our countries problems are so much bigger than who our president is. Continuing to vote the same way over and over again is the definition of insanity.
11/2/2012 3:39:56 PM
11/2/2012 3:42:48 PM
11/2/2012 3:44:01 PM
What's the goal here exactly? I can see 2 possibilities only:(1) you actually manage to sweep some 3rd party into power which can manage to reform the voting system BEFORE the system collapses back into 2 parties(2) you manage to pull the "punished" party (whichever of the 2 parties your vote would have "defaulted" to) in your direction for the *next* electionWhich of these are you envisioning, exactly, as the likely payoff for going third party? I'm not clear on what consequences are being aimed or hoped for in acting this way
11/2/2012 3:48:38 PM
probably none of that shitit's just a juvenile emotional act
11/2/2012 3:49:49 PM
^ exactly...which is made more obvious by the the claim that gary johnson will:
11/2/2012 4:01:51 PM
11/2/2012 4:08:18 PM
Well it's clearly possible that people vote 3rd party (and act indignant or arrogant about it) because they view voting as some sort of act of personal identification ... like a style or consumer choice of a sortAssuming people vote in order to accomplish things, what's the intended goal of the principled 3rd party voter?
11/2/2012 4:09:03 PM
11/2/2012 5:06:51 PM
11/2/2012 5:35:02 PM
11/2/2012 8:11:26 PM
11/2/2012 8:19:00 PM
11/4/2012 5:52:31 PM
quagmire02, Perot has indeed received more of the popular vote than any other third-place Presidential candidate since the two current major parties have existed (1856), although because his support was diffuse, rather than concentrated like Thurmond's Dixiecrats or Wallace's American Independent Party, he didn't get any electoral votes.FTR, if I didn't live in a swing state, I'd vote for Anderson, Stein, or Johnson, depending on who was on the ballot, mainly to help improve their numbers for future debate access or something; more generally I am with McDanger in recognizing the need for reform of the current SMDP system, which ensures that no more than two political parties can be viable in a given area.[Edited on November 4, 2012 at 6:09 PM. Reason : When I lived in Indiana, I voted for the Libertarian, but I am more liberal now.
11/4/2012 6:08:55 PM