Political News and Commentary with the Right Perspective. NAVIGATION
  • Front Page
  • News
  • Multimedia
  • Tags
  • RSS Feed


  • Your New Scoop Site

    Welcome to Scoop!

    To help you figure things out, there is a Scoop Admin Guide which can hopefully answer most of your questions.

    Some tips:

    • Most of the layout is changed in "Blocks", found in the admin tools menu
    • Features can be turned on and off, and configured, in "Site Controls" in the admin tools menu
    • Stories have an "edit" link right beside the "Full Story" link on an index page, and right beside the "Post a Comment" link on the full story page. They can also be edited by clicking the story title in the "Story List" admin tool
    • Boxes are what allow you to write new features for Scoop; they require a knowledge of the perl programming language to work with effectively, although you can often make small changes without knowing much perl. If you would like a feature added but cannot program it yourself, ScoopHost does custom Scoop programming as one of its services.
    • If you aren't sure where to look for a particular feature or piece of display, try the "Search Admin Tools" link in the admin tools menu.

    For support, questions, and general help with Scoop, email support@scoophost.com

    ScoopHost.com is currently running Scoop version Undeterminable from .

    Tag: Virginia Variant

    The District Method - History and Explanation


    By Kevin Rex Heine, Section News
    Posted on Mon Jan 21, 2013 at 02:20:27 PM EST
    Tags: 2012 Presidential Election (by congressional district), Electoral College, 3 USC § 1 & 7, quadrennial presidential elections, states vs. people balance, small states vs. large states balance, popular support vs. distributed support, U. S. Constitution Article 2 § 1 clauses 2 thru 4, U. S. Constitution Amendment XII, original intention, Congressional District Method, Maine, Nebraska, Pennsylvania (pending), Ohio (pending), Virginia (pending), Wisconsin (pending), Michigan (pending), Florida (pending), potentially North Carolina and Nevada, National Popular Vote is constitutionally irrelevant, Maryland (wants out), New Jersey (wants out), Illinois, Hawaii, Washington, Massachusetts, District of Columbia, Vermont, California, New York (not interested), Pennsylvania (not interested), Guarantee Clause, U. S. Constitution Article 4 § 4 clause 1, Massachusetts Variant, Maine Variant, New York Variant, Virginia Variant, Electoral District Method, Tennessee Variant (all tags)

    You may have heard of the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact, an initiative being advanced by a Soros-funded group that intends to bypass the Constitution and obviate the Electoral College, handing the quadrennial presidential elections to whomever wins the plurality of the nationwide popular vote.  This article isn't the place to go into the details of the initiative (the link provides a usable starting point for further research), but suffice it that triggering the compact will realize something that has been a strategic objective of the progressives for quite some time.

    However, America is not a democracy; rather, the United States are a republic.  And that distinction isn't one of mere semantics.  In a republic, the voice of the people is more indirect the more non-local the matter is.  When it comes to elections, I can think of none more non-local than the presidential election.  Among the checks and balances the Founding Fathers included in the Constitution was the balance of the voice of the people with the voice of the states, thus the use of the Electoral College to elect the president every four years.


    (8 comments, 1832 words in story) Full Story



    Advertise on RightMichigan.com

    Login

    Make a new account

    Username:
    Password:
    Tweet along with RightMichigan by
    following us on Twitter HERE!

    External Feeds

    Metro/State News RSS from The Detroit News
    + Volunteers distribute flags on graves of war vets in Royal Oak
    + Volunteers, lawn mowers hit Detroit parks for marathon cleanup
    + Man accused of killing his Novi family in 2008 to be arraigned Sunday
    + Davidson family members in legal battle over foundation
    + Thousands experience Movement at Hart Plaza
    + Hope College student killed by bus in Western Michigan
    + Detroit's creditors could target Detroit Institute of Arts collection
    + Laura Berman: Entrepreneur's urban tree farm is taking root
    + Amtrack train strikes semi-truck in Ann Arbor, no injuries reported
    + Fraudster Ed May, blind, seeks release from prison
    + Service planned after Canton Township man dies day after wedding
    + Detroit council OKs Bing's budget with deeper cuts
    + Detroit union leaders threaten shutdown of 36th District Court amid talk of layoffs
    + Frost possible in Metro Detroit as cold front brings in low temperatures
    + Thousands of bridges at risk of freak collapse

    Politics RSS from The Detroit News
    + Fed furlough day after cuts hampers IRS, HUD services
    + MSU law professor plans AG bid
    + Obama: Nation must do more for fallen heroes
    + Rogers criticizes Justice Department's seizure of AP phone records
    + Obama: Sexual assault threatens trust in military
    + Michigan Congress Dems support Schauer for governor
    + Bill to shorten foreclosure redemption period advances
    + Larry Royster promoted to be clerk of the Michigan Supreme Court
    + Michigan Elections Director appointed to federal election commission
    + Bill would let Michigan install red-light cameras
    + Some unions now angry about health care overhaul
    + New IRS chief cleans house in wake of tea party controversy
    + Obama defends drone use, renews push to shut Gitmo
    + Nonprofit: Michigan understated risks of pet coke piles on Detroit River
    + Obama defends drone strikes but says no cure-all

    create account | faq | search