Representing Dirt

The government has no business having representation by itself, and states with a smaller population having the same representation as much larger states, is representing dirt.
For most people the words "United States of America" are a clue. You think this is a European country with districts. It isn't. This is a collection of states, and as such need representation. Otherwise states like Utah or Nevada would have no say in anything. The electoral college was set up for this reason. If you don't like it, tough nipples, it isn't going to change.
 
Yes the election will affect people's constitutional rights, to equal treatment under the law, and to petition the government for redress of grievances... under which people are entitled to government services.

And don't give me shit about November... that was a very small minority that voted.
Which right are you not enjoying? You are making generalizations (which aren't true, btw). The Constitution rarely gets modified although we have seen activism from the bench and executive branch.

Conservatives want closer adherence to the Constitution, liberals want it to be as flexible as they are. They don't want to do away with it because they want it to mean anything they want so they can claim you are violating their rights when you disagree with their agenda.

The voting results were due to a lot of people tired of the crap and not enough people enthused about defending it. Crying about it changes nothing.
 

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