[OC] Political bias in representative democracy (U.S.A)



[OC] Political bias in representative democracy (U.S.A)

Posted by KabbalahDad

7 comments
  1. Cities are mostly liberal and rural are mostly conservative, not really the discovery of the ages, is it? Both are extremely important and vital to a country like the US’ success.

  2. We get it you value city folk over rural. You value popular vote over state sovereignty. You don’t like our system, then you can shove it. Those little red circles grow all the food and own all the guns.

  3. Articulate, moving visualizations in my r/dataisbeautiful??? What manner of witchcraft is this?

    But seriously, this is the best work I’ve seen here in probably a month, maybe more. Congratulations.

  4. Why is it so horribly JPEG-compressed…

    No legend, no title, no reference to what election this was. Bad presentation.

  5. Let us not forget that to win the Senate, Dems have to win 13 out of 14 swing state seats or hold their red state seats in WV, Ohio, and Montana and win 10 of 14 swing state seats.

    This does not get Dems anywhere near a filibuster proof majority of 60. This is only for 50 seats.

    The Senate (and EC) is insane and evil to maintain.

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