squ1d wrote:While I'm thinking about this, perhaps this is something you can explain to me.
Last election the choices you guys had .. or maybe reached.. were Donald Trump, a moron with a TV show and a rich daddy, and the wife of a previous president. This is out of the millions of US citizens.
Recently, you had two presidents from the same immediate family, George and George W. Then there was the prospect of Hillary following Bill.
All of your candidates come from a very small part of society, and an alarming number of them seem to be related.
This is something I'd typically associate more with a type of government that was more corrupt and less democratic.
Part of the problem is that it is so expensive to get elected these days that a smaller pool of people wind up participating. To win a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives it will cost you an average cost of $1.2 million U.S. dollars. A senate seat is $6.5 million. To get elected president will run hundreds of millions.
http://www.opensecrets.org/overview/index.php With that kind of an obstacle in the way you get people like Trump who received an ungodly amount of free campaign support from the media. Why, I have no fucking clue. It totally boggled my mind that the media helped him win and then got all righteous and ethical after the fact. Except for Faux News. They are still scum.
Or the people we get presented with have worked their way up through the political systems and have become really good at fund raising. I.e. the Clintons or Obama. Obama had some tailwind support from a vast appeal to those who wanted to see a minority president too. But, it would be wrong to presume all of his oompf came from being a minority candidate. He actually did a great job of fund raising and other things.
Another factor that winds up occurring is what I call the "dynasty effect". We saw it with the Kennedy's, the Bush family, and in some small way the Clinton's. It's sort of a pseudo nobility that occurs here in the U.S. Apparently, even though we kicked out a monarchy to establish the country we still like having royal families.
And finally, to address the idea of corruption. Why, yes. We do have some of that. How big of a factor is it in winning or losing elections? It depends on who you ask and which election you consider. For example, if you look at the presidential election in 2000 you might believe that corruption played a big part. Al Gore won the popular vote. Bush won the electoral college vote. But, in a little state called Florida there was the allegation of voting chicanery and democratic votes that were not counted. A Florida state election official who certified the vote counts were valid and proper was also the Republican Chair for the Florida State Republican Party Election Committee to elect Bush for president. She swore she had no conflict of interest and that it was perfectly legal for her to make a decision about the very contentious election results.
There is certainly some evidence to support the claim that Gore would have won the presidential election if ALL of the democrat voters had been counted properly.
Another interesting example of possible chicanery occurs in the 2008 primary elections. Again, Florida, decides to try to be a more decisive factor in the elections and changes their primary date to an earlier date. Rumor has it they are tired of Iowa always getting the attention. The Democratic National Committee rules that the primary votes for Clinton aren't valid because Florida violated party rules about the primary dates. The delegates from Florida who would have cast their votes for Clinton weren't allowed to do so.
Some folks saw that as a maneuver by the powerful men in the DNC and the Democratic party to steal the nomination from Clinton and give it to Obama.
One thing we do know about U.S. politics is that it has always been a very personal and emotional event in the U.S.
"To create more positive results in your life, replace 'if only' with 'next time'." — Author Unknown
"Experience is a hard teacher because she gives the test first, the lesson afterward." — Vernon Law