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Edited on Tue Aug-10-10 02:34 PM by nadinbrzezinski
We live in a representative democracy. We all know that.
Now ask yourselves, how many people vote during the primary? Be honest, how many vote in a primary? Now how many people vote in off year elections? And what is the average in Presidential elections?
The crux of the problem is there. Your politicos are not answering to the majority who does want universal health care. They are answering to a small slice of the potential electorate that happens to be to the right of the majority. And until that dynamic changes, I fear a lot of the changes most of us want won't come. Why? If I am representative (insert name here) and my district tends to vote mostly right of center, what do you think I am going to do as a representative? It does not matter that the MAJORITY of the residents in my district want single payer... those that vote do not. And most people want to keep their jobs.
Now Gibbs was off base, and so are the DLC fans round these parts. But until voting patterns change (why I think the Australian solution, yep mandatory leading to 95% particiation) things will not truly change. They don't have a reason to, since the current electorate will definitely punish them for doing what the majority in the country wants, but does not participate in the system, hence no consequences.
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