Fred-Rick
4 min readJun 26, 2020

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We The People is actually a lie as well. Take our voting system; it is not We The People but divide-and-conquer.

One in eight Americans is African American. Three out of 100 Senators are African American and that is actually an all-time high. There isn’t much We The People about this outcome.

More than half of us are women and we do not even have half of that half sit in all our seats. There isn’t much We The People about this outcome.

Here is an example how divide-and-conquer warps the outcome:

In 1996, New Zealand changed its two-party system to incorporate proportional voting. Amazingly, the number of female representatives jumped by a phenomenal 47 percent in the first next new election. This shows real well how the district voting system discriminates. Winner-take-all suppresses large voting minorities. Today, forty percent of the NZ representatives are females. We have about half that percentage.

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The truth of the matter: Being able to speak the truth at the tables that matter.

This is us, to the left. We are segregated in districts where we have to battle each other for that single seat. This is pure divide-and-conquer.

Voting minorities of as large as 49.9 percent of the voters remain unrepresented; they don’t sit at the tables of decision making, not speaking their truths. Fifty percent plus one vote can dictate the outcome to the unrepresented voting minorities. It doesn’t matter if the voting minority is African American, young adults, women, homosexuals, or the poor; when not in the majority, no seat is obtained. All these large voting minorities are not represented to the level of their numbers.

To the right in the image above one can see the actual We The People system that other nations have. As shown in this example of a city council with eight seats, almost 90 percent of the voters are guaranteed that their vote translates into a representative they handpicked themselves. All substantial voting minorities are represented in this better system. Example.

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When San Francisco moved from At-Large to district voting, the ugly voting system became quite obvious. Prior, in the semi-proportional system also known as city-wide, they had 6 men and 5 women in the eleven supervisor seats. Right after the change to district voting, the city ‘elected’ 10 men and 1 woman in these eleven seats.

The Democratic Party did their best to fix it up over the years. Wonderful as the board may appear today, the Democratic Machine tried to quickly mask the divide-and-conquer system we have with applying a nice pancake layer of We The People makeup.

It should not be a surprise that the system was changed to the more restricted version. Back then, the Green Party had become a popular party in the Bay Area, getting some of the seats in the region. Today, they are gone. By moving back to district voting, the Democrats made sure that third parties wouldn’t get any of their seats. Today, all SF supervisors are registered Democrats.

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There are lies we believe in, and that makes some of us implement the good parts of the lies, making this a better nation than pure divide-and-conquer. But when push comes to shove divide-and-conquer wins at the end of the day.

The good news is that the US Constitution is already demanding the We The People system for cities and counties. Here is a visual.

A: Federal and State governments are given powers and freedoms.
B: The 14th Amendment demands the better system put in place.

As shown to the left, Federal and State governments received #A from the US Constitution and they can use #A to create themselves some leeway with #B.

Cities and counties are not even mentioned in the US Constitution, and so they must fully abide by the highest document of the nation.

States did not receive the power to hand over power to third parties within that then extends their right to ignore #B to the same level as the State.

Cities and counties must follow #B strictly as declared in the US Constitution. But as you can see in the same visual to the right, they assumed those powers that they do not have. They perpetuate the divide-and-conquer system to a level that is not allowed. They should have the We The People system in place, per the highest document in the nation.

We are a diverse nation and we need to honor all. That is best done when all are able to tell our own truths; we should be able to do that in our natural numbers. We should not compete with one another in this ugly system, so some get their representatives and others do not get their representatives. District voting — also known as winner-take-all — is a very demeaning system. It is as far removed from We The People as one can imagine.

Thank you, Katie, for daring to state we were brought up with lies. You are absolutely right. We were fed a lot of lies.

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Fred-Rick
Fred-Rick

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