sauin wrote:
Not when it comes to collusion with republican donors.
Incorrect (Peter Thiel, Bob McNair, Bernard Marcus, the list goes on - what you meant may have been "less"), but going with your argument for half a second, doesn't that beg the question of whether or not the electorate's perceptions of not "colluding" with donors = incorruptibility is even worthwhile for consideration? Maybe some of the responsibility is in the people who looked at Candidate Trump and thought this? And again, if at any point you looked at Donald Trump and thought "incorruptible",
you're a firetrucking moron; at some point some responsibility needs to go on the voters.
sauin wrote:
Yes. Please do not presume my position for me. And thank you for dodging the point.
Eh, it was a rhetorical question. I'd already made up my mind that you probably wouldn't have. Made a presumption.
At no point did I ever say "ignore 2008", Bernie would likely still have lost if the process wasn't broken, however the end does not justify the means.
Sure, and I bet you also tell yourself "you vote your conscience". Or more likely "I'm colluding with my conscience for this one".
The DNC's blatant collusion with one of the candidates should be seen as a warning sign of mounting problems with internal processes. That you're unwilling to even admit to these failings in the democrat's system merely ensures that they will continue to propagate.
Oh we've gone to "blatant collusion". Again, internal signs of *what*? Let's see. We've got a better candidate winning out with the same process in 2008, and then we have a worse candidate losing in 2016 when, and they probably wouldn't have won anyways, no matter which goalposts you move. But as you restated over and over, you know that. The Democratic electorate chose Clinton. Clinton won. What firetrucking warning signs are you going on and on about?
I believe that as has been demonstrated by (mostly leaked) reports that the DNC intentionally developed the structure of their primaries to give hillary the best chance at winning. This can be seen through their refusal to share data with the Sanders campaign, their intentional distribution of polling sites to negatively impact demographics that are more likely to be supporters of Sanders, and their internal referencing to Hillary as their presidential nominee from (If I remember correctly) nearly a year before the first ballot was cast.
I'd say that a "fair go" implies a fair playing field. The Democrat primaries were not.
No, you're confusing "fair playing field" with "even playing field". One is me and ten of my friends vs. you and ten of your friends in a game of pick up football. Uneven is when you've got Tom Brady quarterbacking for you. We've still got a fair shot, but victory seems unlikely. The distinction is a big one. Part and parcel with being an outsider is that you don't necessarily have the entire apparatus of a party at your disposal from the get-go. Not even Sanders was super shocked the DNC rank and file grumbled about him or had Clinton as their candidate of choice.
sauin wrote:
I certainly do agree that your general election structure was almost entirely designed to ensure that the "right" candidate is picked, however as has been demonstrated that design is somewhat flawed. Conversely the superdelegate structure was implemented entirely to grant a disproportionate amount of voting power to a small number of individuals. The original 1981 white paper suggested 30% of the vote should be given to these superdelegates. This was considered undemocratic and set at 14%, by 2008 this number had crept back up to 20%.
Still doesn't explain why you want "a more pure" Democratic representation (rather than the current form which actually lines up pretty well with our theme of representative democracy) when it doesn't actually end up mattering that much.
Which one are we talking about here? Obama? Nearly 600 superdelegates to Hillary's 200? And please, don't resort to ad hominem, keep this discussion civil.
Yeah, that one -- you know, when Obama was pretty clearly not the more established Democrat with the DNC. And no, I've been downright gentle.