Connecticut
Wordless Wednesday
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 12/03/2008 - 09:42Reflections on The National Public Vote.
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 12/01/2008 - 15:17Over on MyLeftNutmeg there is a spirited discussion about the pros and cons of a National Public Vote for the election of the President. BlastFromGlast makes the point that ‘the franchise is not uniform from state to state’ and that ‘we cannot trust reported results’.
His concern about the difference in the franchise from state to state is an important one. Here in Connecticut, we have certain disadvantages when it comes to voting. We do not have election-day registration or early voting. On the other hand, we do have good voter turnout, a paper trail of votes, and we have provisions where felons who have served their time can become re-enfranchised.
Are these differences greater than the differences that the electoral college creates? The estimated population of Texas in 2007 is about 24 million. They have 34 electoral votes, or one elector vote for every 700,000 in the state. Wyoming, with 3 electoral votes, and a population of around half a million has one electoral vote for every 175,000 people in the state. In other words, each vote in Wyoming, if everyone in the state were voting, would have four times the impact as each person voting in Texas. I believe this far outweighs the differences in the franchise from state to state. This gets compounded when you narrow it down to swing voters in swing states. With that one or two states can make all the difference.
This has two negative effects. First, campaigns are going to focus more of their energy on these voters. Perhaps more importantly, it makes these states much more attractive targets for voter fraud. BlastFromGlast has argued that the electoral college is like compartmentalizing sections of a ship so that if one compartment becomes flooded, the ship doesn’t sink. The problem with this is that unless all the compartments are equal, a person looking to sink a ship only needs to find those compartments whose breeching would have the greatest effect on sinking the ship.
So, do we wait until the franchise is more uniform between the states? I believe it is wise to move towards a National Public Vote now, and fix up the problems along the way. Yet what system would work best? One idea that has been popular is for states to assign all of their votes to whomever wins the popular vote. There is a potential danger with this, however. If only a few states do this, then the incentive to campaign in those states is gone. A candidate would be wiser to campaign in states that have not made such a change, since the votes won there would be beneficial in the unchanged state, as well as in any states that have made the change.
One way to get around this, is to make the change effective only when a majority of the electoral votes will be cast that way. However, that might end up being the same as doing nothing.
Another approach to making states more competitive is to follow the example of Maine, where some of the electoral votes are assigned on a congressional district by congressional district basis. For states that have congressional districts that are highly competitive, it would at least make these congressional districts more attractive to national candidates. These two ideas could be combined in a collection of different ways, such as making assigning one electoral vote per congressional district with the remaining votes assigned based on either the popular vote in the state or nationwide, and with assigning all electoral votes based on the national popular vote when a majority of the states have agreed to such a provision.
When you get right down to it, there are a lot of complicated issues about how best to count the votes, and the more we think and talk about them, the more likely we are to find a better solution.
Black Friday, Green Friday
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 11/28/2008 - 11:34I’ve never been a big fan of shopping, so Black Friday is a day that I especially like to avoid stores. This year, with the economy in shambles, everyone is wondering how black this Friday will be for retailers. Other people celebrate today as “Buy Nothing Day”, saying “There’s only one way to avoid the collapse of this human experiment of ours on Planet Earth: we have to consume less.”
Yet it seems like there must be some happy medium between Black Friday and Buy Nothing Day. For me, it is the idea of a Green Friday, a Friday where people who shop, attempt to do so in a way that will help us make better use of our resources. On a simple level, this might mean buying come compact fluorescent light bulbs, or a new solar powered clothes drier.
A week ago, the Wall Street Journal had an article, Surprise Drop in Power Use Delivers Jolt to Utilities. It starts off wondering whether “An unexpected drop in U.S. electricity consumption ... isn't a byproduct of the economic downturn, and could reflect a permanent shift in consumption”. I am hoping it is a permanent shift in consumption.
The same day, NPR ran a story, New EPA Rules Imperil Parks, Critics Say. In the story, the proponents of the rule change argued that “the change is needed … to meet the growing need for electricity”. Somehow this seems to disconnect with the Wall Street Journal article.
So, beyond moving towards more energy efficient devices in our lives, what else can we do to help make Black Friday a little greener?
I’ve become more and more interested in buying local. We get much of produce from Gazy Brother’s Farm in Oxford, CT. We get a large box of fresh, in season produce that has been grown locally each week. We got our Thanksgiving Day turkey at Gozzi’s Turkey Farm in Guilford, CT. We washed this all down with some home made hard cider.
We got the sweet cider from Beardsley Cider Mill in Shelton, CT. We used some brewing equipment that Kim had to ferment the cider, and got some additional supplies from Maltose Express in Monroe, CT.
This leads to the next part of Green Friday. We are trying to have a good frugal Christmas this year, and part of what will make it successful is giving lots of homemade gifts, including some of the hard cider. For those who like to shop online, I would encourage you to buy crafts from Etsy.com. Many Etsy merchants use EntreCard to get more traffic to their blogs and stores, and I’ve found many great sites that way. A few shops to check out include Lova Revolutionary, Steam Powered Rings, and Gold Toned Designs.
Yet for us, one of the best places to go for Christmas shopping is Alpaca Hill Farm in Seymour, CT. They sell alpaca rovings for those who want to spin their own yard, alpaca yarn, for those who want to buy the yarn and do their own knitting or crocheting, as well as ready made garments. It is a fun family outing, and that is saying a lot, coming from someone that doesn’t like shopping. They will be having their open house from ten until five on November 28th and 29th as well as December 6th, 13th and 20th.
So, perhaps instead of Black Friday, where either people buy a bunch of stuff they don’t need, or retail sales plummet, we can move towards a greener Friday, where people buy things that help all of us live a kinder, gentler, happier life, that reduces all the junk we consume.
Wordless Wednesday
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 11/26/2008 - 08:58In the Dark of the Night
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 11/25/2008 - 10:49In 2002, President Bush sought the Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution. We were told that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction, and that if Congress did not act quickly, something horrible would happen. Well, Congress did act quickly, and something horrible did happen.
With the recent financial crisis, we were told that if Congress did not act quickly on a $700 billion bailout bill, something horrible would happen. Well, again, Congress did act quickly, and we are yet again, trying to clean up the mess afterwards.
One would think that we, as a nation, would learn that when legislative branches act quickly, without proper deliberation or feedback from citizens, we get stuck with a mess.
Politicians, on the other hand, don’t like it if people stop and think about whatever bill they are pushing. People might organize and the politicians might not get their pet project.
Last night, we saw this played out in Connecticut. Yesterday, Rep. Amann and Sen. Williams introduced Bill No. 7601- An Act Concerning Deficit Mitigation, and in the dark of the night, it passed both chambers, with little or no public input.
We can argue about whether the cuts were too big, too little, cutting in the right places, or the wrong places, and what role the rainy day fund should have in this. As a matter of fact we should argue about this. We should encourage everyone to join in a spirited discussion of how the State Government should best spend its money during these difficult times.
Unfortunately, the General Assembly did not chose to give the citizens that opportunity. I hope you let your State Legislators know your opinion about budgets passed in the dark of the night.
(Originally published at MyLeftNutmeg)