the_scot wrote:Therefore, I feel that the time as come for us to push for a Constitutional amendment to add "NONE OF THE ABOVE" to the ballot.
If there is anything that Richard Pryor has taught us (besides freebasing cocaine isn't the best idea) is that the NONE OF THE ABOVE vote also doesn't matter.
Brewster's Million's was a great movie... nostalgia aside, I've always been in favor of a multiple choice ballot. I know there is a name for this, but I cannot remember what it is called - basically you vote for your 1st choice, and your 2nd choice, and your 3rd choice, etc. If no one's first choice wins a majority, then the votes for second choice (and on down the line) are tallied until someone wins a majority. A pain in the butt to count by hand, but controlled by OSS software, it could be done quite efficiently.
The idea being that people would be more willing to place their first vote for their real choice, instead of worrying about "throwing their vote away" for a candidate that numerically has no shot. There was a good writeup about what changes this could cause in the Far Future Fembot series.
Constitutional amendments I
would like to see?
#1 - The US Government is forbidden from increasing the size of America through conquest (voluntary petition for statehood is still ok).
#2 - Truth in Statistics - all uses of statistics in print or in political speechs must be referenced and accessable by all.
#3 - Medical Corps - all medical units in all armed services are placed under separate command, and can be used internally. Ths one is kinda random, but would be nice if people who wanted to be doctors got free education in exchange of 5-10 years of public - non-military - service.
#4 - Sbudda is Awesome amendment - everyone agrees that I'm really, really cool.
MISER wrote:And we have lost the sight and vision of what this nation was founded for in truth and philosophy. AND YES RELIGIOUSLY!
I'm gonna have to disagree with you on that one. Aside from various quotes from the Founding Fathers like these...
Thomas Jefferson wrote:"Christianity neither is, nor ever was a part of the common law."
"And the day will come when the mystical generation of Jesus, by the supreme being as his father in the womb of a virgin will be classed with the fable of the generation of Minerve in the brain of Jupiter."
...but also from our Nation's common history. If you recall, the Pilgrims left England to escape religious intolerance. Religious intolerance that was brought about by England's
official Anglican church. People only want a religious state when that state is run by their own religion. For the same reason you wouldn't want an Islamic state, a state run by another religion would only differ by the cut of the burka. Heck, could you imagine how much fighting there would be if America was a Baptist, or Catholic country? Not to say that the Catholics or Baptists are particularly violent - well, ok maybe - but that other sects would fight them frequently
Don't forget,
In God We Trust wasn't added to coins until 1864. It disappeared in 1883 and did not reappear until 1938. The Constitution has no reference to God, or a Creator, or Jesus in it or any amendments. While there is a mention of a creator in the Declaration, "the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them" doesn't really specify anything. Nor does "endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights" differ from the writing style of other deist thinkers of that period. So, the nation may have become religious, but it sure wasn't
founded that way...
Spec8472 wrote:#1 - Sennadar is a fictitious, fantasy world.
Wait, Sennadar is fake? Mom's gonna be so mad at me for selling our cows for the beans that guy said would get me there...
