mementomori wrote:@hanelle: I agree, a two party structure just isn't the way to go. The sort of coalition governments that are fostered in other countries seem much more workable to me. However, the winner-takes-all structure of American elections makes it so that it's all but impossible for a third party to gain ground. Every time there has been third parties in American history, they've either vanished or replaced an old party in the two party system. Proportional representation is the only way that we'd get 3+ parties going. But switching to a proportional representation system would require a massive overhaul of election law (and con. law, to a certain extent). It seems to go hand in hand with a parliamentary governmental structure, not the sort that the US has.
People really need to vote more...but I can't say I blame people for feeling powerless. Especially those who get screwed out of being able to vote by being stuck at work with their employer unwilling to let them take the time to go to their polling place. That's not right at all. National election days should be holidays, since it's pretty obvious employers aren't willing to change the way they operate on their own for the benefit of their employees/community.
...I'm only slightly bitter. XD
I think part of what's happening is people are transferring their anger with legislative politics onto presidential politics. I wonder if Congress weren't so unbelievably dysfunctional, would so many people be voting for Trump? I'd like to think not. Luckily, there are a few seemingly simple things we could do to fix Congress.
Like, for example, Congress could agree to pass separate bills like sane people instead of mashing all their bills together into unreadable uber bills that NO ONE IN CONGRESS ACTUALLY READS and that is more of a monster of a bunch different bills, the subjects of which are completely unrelated.
We could also separate legislation from appropriations. So a bill intended to fix highways and bridges doesn't end up dying in committee because Republicans want to add a paragraph about not using federal funds for abortions. Democrats then object, there's a long public fight and then the bill dies and everybody moves on leaving your highways and bridges to rot. And it's not as if the Democrats had anything to show for it either, because Republicans have been sneaking anti-abortion legislation into unrelated bills for YEARS.
I mean, I love arguing. I love debate. I want us to be able to have conversations, but Congress is like a really, really, really terrible middle school research paper that has no point and brings in too many references and doesn't properly cite any of them.