This is a subverse designed to encourage adult discussion spanning the entirety of the political spectrum. All are welcome, from Libertarians to Authoritarians, Democrats to Republicans, An Caps to Anarchists, Socialists to Fascists to Communists, Green, Blue, Black, White, Purple with Yellow Polka dots, whatever color, persuasion, or affiliation, this is a place for you to post your thoughts, articles, and engage in discussion meant to foster understanding.
Politics is best when we try to avoid personal attacks, limits on discussion, censorship, trolling, shilling, racism, homophobia, antisemitism, or any other forms of bigotry and malfeasance.
Election 2020 Politics Sticky
Politics 2017 Christmas Theme sticky
Nov 2016 sticky on new CSS
This subverse belongs to the community of users. Users are invited to post meta-threads about v/politics and I will gladly sticky them. @flyawayhigh
Use the "Report Spam" link to report spam and someone will review the report. J-mods have the ability to remove duplicate noncommercial spam.
v/politics is for all politics.
v/uspolitics is for US politics only.
v/worldpolitics is for international or non-US politics.
v/politicalnews is dedicated to virtually censor-free politics and news
v/news is for news around the world.
v/usnews is for domestic news only.
view the rest of the comments →
[–] McBitches ago
I don't get how that just happens. What the fuck is the point then?
[–] Men13 1 point 2 points 3 points (+3|-1) ago
The DNC is a private organization. They can do whatever the fuck they want - if you don't like it just vote for some other party. I mean, legally you can have a political party that just tells you "this is who we're running for president. If you don't like it - vote for someone else".
That's more or less what the DNC does. The problem is - the two party system (or "first past the pole") guarantees you don't have a third option. What we need is something like proportional representation - where you don't vote for individuals (congressmen / president) but rather for parties, and the parties "fill the seats" with an amount of people proportional to the number of votes they got.
That way if, say, 5% of people vote for a small, little known, party for a single little cared about issue - that party will still get ~5 congressmen which is nothing to sneeze at. Right now, if 5% of the population thinks an issue is important - no one cares at all.