Exactly.Limewater wrote: IF YOU DON'T LOVE IT LEAVE IT! WHOOOO! USA #1!!!!!!!1111
Abe Lincoln wrote: I like to see a man proud of the place in which he lives. I like to see a man live so that his place will be proud of him. ~Abraham Lincoln
Exactly.Limewater wrote: IF YOU DON'T LOVE IT LEAVE IT! WHOOOO! USA #1!!!!!!!1111
Abe Lincoln wrote: I like to see a man proud of the place in which he lives. I like to see a man live so that his place will be proud of him. ~Abraham Lincoln
Octopod wrote: They both come off as big tools to me. And I guess he is not a Republican, he is an Independent, but really he is a Republican.
I don't see how this will really change from what's done today except to save you 15-20 minutes at the polls.Limewater wrote: I don't. I'm pretty iffy on this whole democracy thing anyway. I don't want other people voting for stuff that affects me. With internet voting, it will be even more people voting for stuff that affects me. Where is that a good thing?
By "we" I meant Luke and myself. Without the electoral college, the entire country would pretty much exist solely for the service of California and the northeast.Xonticus wrote: Edit: I don't know what you meant by where we all live Limewater but I live in Western CT, if that is an issue somehow
gtmtnbiker wrote:Exactly.Limewater wrote: IF YOU DON'T LOVE IT LEAVE IT! WHOOOO! USA #1!!!!!!!1111
How about you move to North Korea?
Abe Lincoln wrote: I like to see a man proud of the place in which he lives. I like to see a man live so that his place will be proud of him. ~Abraham Lincoln
You have it backwards. If you don't agree, then vote to change it. How much it will change is debatable. But nothing changes without it.Octopod wrote:I have never voted in my life. My personal feeling is that if I participate then I am legitimizing a form a government I highly disagree with. That said I actually feel kind of sick to my stomache thinking that Scott Brown could win. Man that would fucking suck.
No. I'll remain here and get punched in the face, rather than go to North Korea and get kicked in the crotch.gtmtnbiker wrote:
Exactly.How about you move to North Korea?
15-20 minutes? It took me two hours to get through the line during the last presidential election.gtmtnbiker wrote:I don't see how this will really change from what's done today except to save you 15-20 minutes at the polls.Limewater wrote: I don't. I'm pretty iffy on this whole democracy thing anyway. I don't want other people voting for stuff that affects me. With internet voting, it will be even more people voting for stuff that affects me. Where is that a good thing?
What state do you live in? Have you ever voted in state or local elections? Actual policy/law comes up quite a bit at those levels. The most well-known recent example is probably Prop. 8 in California.You're voting for various people to represent your interests, the interests of the local area, your state/province, and your country. You're not voting directly on some policy/law.
Who has a better right to complain about getting punched in the face? A guy who is just standing there, minding his own business, or a guy who participates in a boxing match?RadarScope1 wrote:You have it backwards. If you don't agree, then vote to change it. How much it will change is debatable. But nothing changes without it.Octopod wrote:I have never voted in my life. My personal feeling is that if I participate then I am legitimizing a form a government I highly disagree with. That said I actually feel kind of sick to my stomache thinking that Scott Brown could win. Man that would fucking suck.
Who is this mystical sister that keeps popping up, anyway, I'm intriugued.Luke wrote:Dating my sister
Check out my sale thread below, NeoGeo MVS carts & Arcade gear wanted!:Niode wrote:Send him a dodgy cheque. Make it out to Scammy McScammerson.