Message from @Cobra Commander
Discord ID: 652019654717341735
republicans lmao
It's counter-intuitive because it makes the congress even more bloated, which will create more gridlock, all the while resting on the assumption that more people in congress will lead to less corruption (which while not impossible is not something you should take as a guarantee at all); term limits largely negates this problem and simply cycles people out, likely before too much corruption happens in the first place; not hard to understand. Also that would not be a "fixed" cost then as that isn't any sort of standardized thing, it's simply the cost of a bribe.
obviously the idea of 'growing' the house is not abnormal since it grew from 65 to 435 from 'founding' till 1920. the change and trend was related more to the urbanization of the country, not a 'size' problem.
Yeah and it's already quite grid locked today
dude, you keep saying term limits. Term limits adderss a DIFFERENT issue altogether. they are compatible
can you not understand the difference between a term limit and ratio of population to representative diluting your 'per session' voice
How exactly is the representative to population ratio as important?
because it raises the amount of voice per person. instead of having your vote diluted with 750k people, it's down to 250k or whatever amount.more reps, more reps to interface with the population, more responsiveness
more districts, smooths out gerrymandering shennanigans, turns the congress more 'parlimentry' instead of washing out so many 'minority' votes
The representative to population ratio should be 1:1 on almost every issue
for a state like california, that's basically what they have on the propositions
and that's amost 40million people
Sure, and I agree on that front, but if you have more people it will still create more gridlock.
You can't increase the amount too much
how is that even the case when a large state like california with 40million already does it
Well california isn't doing particularly well right now so they aren't exactly a shining example
California is doing great and carries much of the US on its back
it's the world's 6th or 7th largest economy, the proposition system is great, high income but low property taxes, it gets bills that the population wants out faster than almost any state despite its size
it's hamstrung by the federal situation because it has to harmonize with 'conservatives'
it's a major net-tax loser, the worst by gross, and upper third by relative measure
millions leave, millions come, it can't grow forever other states also have industries that are competitive for jobs and population
yea what major problem does san diego have
i lived there 13 years
major problem with california cities is they are too popular, so they are crowded as fuck
and also have major city management problems
San Diego for instance is one of the areas with a large population of homeless people
@Sh0t the House ratio, is based on population
You are talking about the house right?
I just got back
the apportionment is
san diego has lots of homeless because it's a very homeless friendly city, the weather is good to live outdoors
i went from san diego to west palm florida, same problem
San Diego gay
you can be from anywhere in the us and end up homeless in san diego, since we dont have intra-national border control
The homeless population there has lead to a large poo clean up problem too
which is remarkable honestly
that's in san fran, which is a much more concentrated city
No it's also in San Diego
Pretty sure, it might be another poo related problem though instead of lurking on the streets
San Diego lets peolpe live in their cars and the water system doesn't 'run' fast, so it backs up adn you get issues with that