AProudLefty
The remora of JPP
No, removing the 17th Amendment would go far to restoring the Republic. Do you even know what the 17th Amendment did and how things were done before it was enacted? I doubt it.
Explain how the 17th made it worse.
No, removing the 17th Amendment would go far to restoring the Republic. Do you even know what the 17th Amendment did and how things were done before it was enacted? I doubt it.
No I despise radical Leftists, like you, who want to destroy what they established and has worked so well for America.
No, removing the 17th Amendment would go far to restoring the Republic. Do you even know what the 17th Amendment did and how things were done before it was enacted? I doubt it.
https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/17th-amendment
Does the Republican Party want to repeal the 17th?
The original design was state legislators picked senators
If you want to go backwards please explain why we should go backwards to old definitions of words and eliminate the powers the FOUNDERS INTENDED us to have
You can’t have it both ways
Either we accept the legal changes in the constitution that the Founders created for us to make
Or face that your argument is fucking ridiculous
No, removing the 17th Amendment would go far to restoring the Republic. Do you even know what the 17th Amendment did and how things were done before it was enacted? I doubt it.
No, removing the 17th Amendment would go far to restoring the Republic. Do you even know what the 17th Amendment did and how things were done before it was enacted? I doubt it.
Explain how the 17th made it worse.
Explain how the 17th made it worse.
Because it turned the Senate into a second House. Prior to the 17th, senators were selected by the state they were from, not directly elected by the people of that state. This process varied by state some. States either had the legislature select the state's senators subject to approval by the governor, or the governor selected them subject to approval by the legislature. No election involved. State government selected their senators to represent the State, not the people. The People were represented by their representatives in the House.
With the 17th, the people selected their senators just like their representatives and defacto turned the Senate into a second House. The states were no longer represented.
The reason this was done by the founders was to further divide power among more different and disparate groups so none had too much.
That doesn't answer my question.
Because it turned the Senate into a second House. Prior to the 17th, senators were selected by the state they were from, not directly elected by the people of that state. This process varied by state some. States either had the legislature select the state's senators subject to approval by the governor, or the governor selected them subject to approval by the legislature. No election involved. State government selected their senators to represent the State, not the people. The People were represented by their representatives in the House.
With the 17th, the people selected their senators just like their representatives and defacto turned the Senate into a second House. The states were no longer represented.
The reason this was done by the founders was to further divide power among more different and disparate groups so none had too much.
At least you asked. All evince can do is rant and rave with profanity at her complete lack of knowledge on the subject preventing even a scintilla of rational response.
What? You can't make conclusions from that? It concentrated more power in the hands of the mob (aka public) rather than divided it up as the founders intended. The same thing would happen with direct election of Presidents. That's why the founders set things up like they did. They wanted power to be as divided as possible because they knew letting it be concentrated would lead to authoritarian and totalitarian rule once it was concentrated in the hands of a few.
What? You can't make conclusions from that? It concentrated more power in the hands of the mob (aka public) rather than divided it up as the founders intended. The same thing would happen with direct election of Presidents. That's why the founders set things up like they did. They wanted power to be as divided as possible because they knew letting it be concentrated would lead to authoritarian and totalitarian rule once it was concentrated in the hands of a few.
This isn't about electing Presidents. The voters in their states elect senators to represent their states.
Exactly
What? You can't make conclusions from that? It concentrated more power in the hands of the mob (aka public) rather than divided it up as the founders intended. The same thing would happen with direct election of Presidents. That's why the founders set things up like they did. They wanted power to be as divided as possible because they knew letting it be concentrated would lead to authoritarian and totalitarian rule once it was concentrated in the hands of a few.
https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/17th-amendment
Does the Republican Party want to repeal the 17th?
Not seriously.
No, removing the 17th Amendment would go far to restoring the Republic. Do you even know what the 17th Amendment did and how things were done before it was enacted? I doubt it.