• 1 Post
  • 877 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: February 9th, 2025

help-circle






  • What about recent American politics gives you the impression that states will act in good faith? Hell, look back even farther at the slave state collusion for Mexican territory, secession, Reconstruction fuckery, Jim crow, etc…

    The only limit to states acting in bad faith has historically been the federal government. When states start fucking around too much, laws like the Voting Rights Act get drawn up to claw more power away from them.

    IMO the state-federation experiment has all but failed and the majority of good faith states need a proper convention to build a modern government. Choosing now of all times to put your faith in those anti-democratic, Christo-fascist slave states is the dumbest option possible.



  • It can’t enable anything without federal oversight via a constitutional amendment. Voting is within the purview of each individual state, so the states in this compact have no oversight on their peers (let alone the powers to demand a recount or rerun the election).

    For example, let’s say 20 states make up exactly 270 EC votes. The popular vote within those states (if allocated proportional to votes) ends up as 136/270 to candidate X. The other 30 states report universal support for candidate Y.

    By rights, Y should win with 402 EC votes and 74% of the popular vote. But if the compact chooses to ignore those states as fraudulent then candidate X wins with a mere 26%.

    Similar fuckery can happen with late reporting of votes or a state in the compact reneging on the agreement and voting against the rest. There’s absolutely nothing binding about this, it’s just a pinky promise among these states.



  • Not necessarily good or bad. There’s nothing binding here, just based on good faith reporting. Best case scenario would be all blue states and a few less-red swing states signing on, effectively disenfranchising red states.

    Of course I’d bet any amount of money that SCOTUS would rule that a plan like this can’t leave out any state’s reported result. From there it’s a simple step to say “Texas and Florida are reporting 99% votes for Trump”, allowing their large populations to rig the results.



  • stickly@lemmy.worldto196@lemmy.blahaj.zonerule
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    39
    ·
    edit-2
    3 days ago

    Other fun facts:

    • It was originally supposed to be Washington on a horse
    • At its completion it was the tallest man made structure in the world
    • It remains the largest free-standing masonry structure in the world
    • The 2.85kg aluminum cap cost about $7500 in 2026 USD. At the current price of aluminum it would be about $10

    Source


  • It has a historical meaning (Harm Reduction: defiant acts of care and resistance) and a literal meaning (harm reduction: tactics to mitigate tangible damage from oppressive systems). You’re just arguing pedantics unless you’re pretending my meaning isn’t obvious from the context of the conversation.




  • stickly@lemmy.worldtoFlippanarchy@lemmy.dbzer0.comthat's goofy
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    4 days ago

    Britain’s next election…

    The UK electoral system may as well be from Mars when compared to the USA.

    • For one, they have 650 MPs representing a population of 67 million. The US has 535 total reps split across a bicameral legislature. Combining Texas + California, you have 90 house seats and 4 senators representing 70 million people! It’s incredibly important for all of those people to be on the same page when such high leverage seats are on the line.
    • The byzantine system of the Senate and the Electoral College similarly fuck with election strategy. It doesn’t mean jack shit if your progressive candidates draw 30 million extra votes if those votes come from California and NY.
    • A motion can dissolve the UK government and trigger a new vote at any time, the US can’t do shit until the next election cycle.

    Keep running down the list and it becomes more and more obvious that US elections have extremely high stakes, keeping the establishment parties nice and comfy.

    Remember, the Republican Party started as a third party…

    It emerged at a time when both major parties were losing ground with their voter base, not spontaneously from one side of the political spectrum. In 1854, 5 new parties were vying for seats which gave them lots of room to maneuver. [They had even more room than today when you compare 1800s representation against the 435 rep cap we have now.]

    Today there’s no MAGA splinter party; the GOP is in a firm lockstep and polls indicate that their core base will never waiver. Unless you can totally supplant the Dems on the left in one fell swoop, you’re still stuck at their negotiating table. You might get a new party logo on your name tag but you’re as much at the whims of fascist collaborators as before.

    [MAGA did] not fundamentally challenging the core beliefs of the party

    This is incredibly ironic because decades of grooming went into supplanting the old 20th century GOP platform. It feels like nothing changed but that’s due to how persistent and focused the campaign was. Look at John McCain. One of the last true, piece of shit, old school Republicans and he ended his long established career blocking MAGA.

    reforming the Dems would require fundamentally uprooting their core values and power structure

    The lack of core values has been a criticism for decades, they’re a blank slate in that department. Would it be a more drastic heel turn than shifting the “party of small government and tax cuts” into “record breaking debt, spending and raising taxes”?

    Donors and DNC power structures only matter as tools of suppression. If you can break the seal and get the votes in spite of those roadblocks, you can keep the votes without them.

    old financial backers and supporters of centrist policies will walk away

    If the campaign money shifts away from a newly progressive Democrat party, where will it go to? A new center right party courting R votes? They’ve shown that strategy doesn’t work. A new spineless, controlled “leftist” opposition party? Well then they’re stuck building against all the two party roadblocks they put up themselves!




  • stickly@lemmy.worldtoFlippanarchy@lemmy.dbzer0.comthat's goofy
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    6
    arrow-down
    5
    ·
    5 days ago

    lay that groundwork for the next election

    The fact that “next election” to you means the presidential election is very telling. There are more progressive candidates penciled on the midterm ballots (let alone the active primaries) than there have been in living memory. And that’s not counting local progressive candidates that are already in office from this election cycle.

    But to hear everyone talk, anything short of a leftist presidency is a failure in the same way that anything short of a spontaneous revolution isn’t worth doing. A milquetoast neolib president shackled by a progressive Congress by far the best option in the realm of possibility.


    This is what drives left infighting, a complete disconnect on what’s desired and what’s possible. Some limitations are just so obvious that I don’t know how people ignore them.

    • All media is controlled by billionaire corporate interests who have a ton to lose from the left gaining power. The revolution will not be televised and your left political wave will not come through social media. This will not change and you don’t have the wallet to fight it.
    • Related, there will never be a viable third party no matter how much wishcasting you project. FPTP firmly entrenched the two party system and it would take a herculean reform effort to uproot it. There’s a reason that the Republican and Democratic platforms have shifted all over the map since the 1800s, you can’t splinter and keep any power.
    • Following that, the road map for usurping the DNC has already been shown to us. Power is displaced from the bottom up and a presidency is the last thing captured. Unfortunately, as they act as party of controlled opposition, the fight to disrupt that will be harder than it ever was.
    • Finally, the floodgates have been opened to a fascist takeover of the USA. To a certain extent, there’s no closing Pandora’s box and expectations and plans need to be adjusted for the new world.

    So look at those facts and ask simple questions. Can reform by electoralism be attempted in this environment? What is the best chance for harm reduction here? Do the old rules apply in the same way (eg. is not voting blue even an option now)? Can this regime even be removed from office by normal means? What battles will you pick?

    If you’ve really thought through all of that and landed on complaining about Harris and Newsome then I don’t know what to say. That is so far down the branch of things we can’t change (media narrative control, DNC establishment power, nascent progressive bloc still solidifying) that it’s not worth discussing.