Which is why the DNC has been in court this month arguing that they have no legal obligation to be impartial or even-handed, despite the charter of the DNC. I'd think that admitting to being not-impartial as the governing body of an electoral process is improper.Diotima wrote: Nothing the DNC did was improper during the primaries, even if some of the things they talked about doing might have been.
The sole qualifications to be the president of the united states of america is to win a majority of the electoral college votes and to not be impeached. You may disagree with these qualifications (and I certainly feel that the electoral colleges are in many ways one of the worst parts of the current presidential electoral system), but at this point in time having failed that first condition, Hillary was clearly not qualified.Diotima wrote: Hillary Clinton would have been perhaps the most qualified person to be President since Eisenhower, if not Roosevelt in his third term.
Then start your military junta.Diotima wrote: The real flaw is that we're electing our President in the first place. That position is the head of the Administration of our government, and Commander in Chief of the most sophisticated and powerful military in history. It is not to be some kind of super-representative to the People. It is beyond ridiculous to suppose that the average voter is qualified to make a decision as to who would best perform that job, let alone that all of them together would be.
I thought you just said that you didn't want elections and by that definition wanted to implement an oligarchy. This argument isn't consistent.Diotima wrote: Mob-rule is not democracy, it is demagoguery masquerading as democracy. And is usually a puppet for oligarchs and genuine aristocrats.
Ok, so we're back to arguing against the population having any say in the rules that govern their lives.Diotima wrote:And the bulk of those failures stem from the fact that we elect those representatives from districts in the first place.
So either you're arguing against representative democracy here and for a pure democracy, but your argument above indicates that you don't think that the people should have a say.Diotima wrote:Democracy does not imply or require elections, it requires that the legitimacy and authority of the government descend from the People. Elections are merely the highly flawed tool with which we currently ensure that descent.
To summarise, you want the government to have the legitimacy and authority of the people, without the people actually agreeing to it.