Keith&Co.
Contributor
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2006
- Messages
- 22,444
- Location
- Far Western Mass
- Gender
- Here.
- Basic Beliefs
- I'm here...
I worry that the greater part of our population is subject to mood swings and rumors. I like the idea of a buffer between media-zonked voters and putting reality-TV stars at the helm.
I also like there being SOME reason that the candidates have to pay attention to more than four states with population centers.
But these days, the internet allows us to form community along a lot more lines than mere proximity. Religion, ethnicity, interests, fetishes, philosophies, education level, education location, military service, thinking Rush Limbaugh is NOT a fat fucking sausage of hate, favorite sportball teams...
What if the electoral college represented various of these communities, on a rotating basis, selected in advance....
And we didn't tell the candidates who was who?
An electoral university meets and decides this year's divisions, based on one or another recognized community.
Ballots include places where voters take a stand inside or outside these communities. Several questions asked each year, only one of them the active choice for that election.
One year, the electors might choose professions. Make the medical field a voting 'district,' alongside construction, education, artisanal beard-oil vendors, cooks, service, gypsies, etc.
Another year, maybe the votes are collected together by favorite TV show. Or maybe if the shows aren't chosen as the basis of an elector, at least the question on the ballot would give some candidates pause, wondering if they spent enough time trying to woo the Game of Thrones voters...
I think mystery electoral divisions would vastly improve Candidates actually having to pony up plans for what they really want to do and how they expect to achieve it. Because you never know who you're targeting, you have to make your widest possible appeal.
And when someone asks a question at a rally in Bayonne, NJ, you have no idea if they represent Bayonne, or Hair Dressers, or Weather Channel fans, or people who put pineapple on pizza. Even they don't know.
I also like there being SOME reason that the candidates have to pay attention to more than four states with population centers.
But these days, the internet allows us to form community along a lot more lines than mere proximity. Religion, ethnicity, interests, fetishes, philosophies, education level, education location, military service, thinking Rush Limbaugh is NOT a fat fucking sausage of hate, favorite sportball teams...
What if the electoral college represented various of these communities, on a rotating basis, selected in advance....
And we didn't tell the candidates who was who?
An electoral university meets and decides this year's divisions, based on one or another recognized community.
Ballots include places where voters take a stand inside or outside these communities. Several questions asked each year, only one of them the active choice for that election.
One year, the electors might choose professions. Make the medical field a voting 'district,' alongside construction, education, artisanal beard-oil vendors, cooks, service, gypsies, etc.
Another year, maybe the votes are collected together by favorite TV show. Or maybe if the shows aren't chosen as the basis of an elector, at least the question on the ballot would give some candidates pause, wondering if they spent enough time trying to woo the Game of Thrones voters...
I think mystery electoral divisions would vastly improve Candidates actually having to pony up plans for what they really want to do and how they expect to achieve it. Because you never know who you're targeting, you have to make your widest possible appeal.
And when someone asks a question at a rally in Bayonne, NJ, you have no idea if they represent Bayonne, or Hair Dressers, or Weather Channel fans, or people who put pineapple on pizza. Even they don't know.