We don't elect the president. We elect electors that elect the president. It plays little to no role in representation or policy above the state level.
In what system does the state and those in powerful position (big companies...
Do we elect electors or delegates? Or rather, do we nominally elect electors but expect them to behave as delegates?
You elect electors who may or may not vote for the candidate they pledge to vote for.
I did not vote for an elector though. I voted for a presidential candidate with the expectation that the state government would select elector-delegates to vote for the candidate who got the most votes in the state.
>Do you really think teaching basic logic would fix the issue?
yes, why wouldn't we? logic applies to literally all of your thinking in life. not teaching it to children is choosing for them to either be retarded or work it out themselves.
You voted with full knowledge that is not how the system works. It may not have the elector's name on the ballot, but you voted for the elector, not the candidate.
That is how the system works you retard. I did not vote for an elector. The state never asked me or gave me a choice in electors. They asked me who I wanted the elector to vote for.
That's the point I was making ya dingus
Why does the state attack morality, justice and religion if it benefits them?
It is a myth that the state wants good obedient people. A good person is not a weak person, an obedient person is not necessarily submissive, they might be cooperative with "extreme far-right" "militants" for example and be utterly devoted to resisting the state and securing their rights, constantly evading tax and sabotaging law enforcement efforts in their area ensuring they are a net cost to the federal government until they get out.
In the state's view this is magically """"bad"""" somehow.