• @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    Well… That would depend on how many people vote for a third party, doesn’t it?

    I mean, I know Americans love telling other Americans that voting third party is a wasted vote, but that’s a self-fulfilling profacy. If everyone believes nobody is voting third party, then nobody will vote third party, so third parties never win, which will lead Americans to say that nobody votes for third parties.

    Your first past the post system and your major news agencies who don’t have the decency to pretend to be impartial is really doing a number on your country.

    Edit: Always fun to see how Americans get so offended about being reminded of such a simple fact. All the excuses and the downvotes are great indications of how you’re all doomed to be stuck with what you have.

    You are your own worst enemy.

    • @[email protected]
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      149 months ago

      It’s mathematically Impossible to have a 3rd party in the US, when are you people with other systems going to understand that?

        • @[email protected]
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          79 months ago

          You need 270 Electoral College votes to prevent the vote going to the states for the Presidency. There are 538 votes available. The only way to have more than two parties compete and have the election not go to the House is if one party is unified and has large public support against the other parties that do not. This essentially creates a single-party state.

          Ergo, our system is designed to have two parties, each with roughly half the population behind them. Anything more mathematically ends in a single party state.

        • @[email protected]
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          79 months ago

          Then why do they never win any votes in the electoral college? When is the last time a third party ever succeeded nationally in the US when it didn’t involve the dissolution of some other party that preceded it?

            • @[email protected]
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              59 months ago

              Then I guess I’d like someone to explain the mathematical probability, because from an empirical standpoint I haven’t seen anything to disprove the claim being made above.

              • @[email protected]
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                29 months ago

                you can’t prove a negative, but a positive claim has been offered here. so the person putting forward the claim must support it, as a claim made without evidence can be dismissed without evidence.

                • @[email protected]
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                  19 months ago

                  You absolutely can prove a negative, actually.

                  The very assertion that a negative claim can’t be proven is itself a negative claim, to frame it another way. Though that claim is unproven as it would be a paradox to be otherwise.