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Professor: North Carolina Is NO LONGER A DEMOCRACY
Daily Caller ^ | 12/30/2016 | Eric Owens

Posted on 12/31/2016 4:42:29 AM PST by maddog55

A taxpayer-funded political science professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has concluded that political conditions in North Carolina are comparable to political conditions in totalitarian nations such as Cuba, Venezuela and Iran because Republicans are too politically successful.

The professor, Andrew Reynolds, aired his 936-word grievance last week in The News & Observer, a newspaper out of Raleigh.

North Carolina “can no longer be classified as a full democracy,” Reynolds declares, because the statewide Republican Party has been too successful at winning the state’s winner-take-all elections.

The winner-take-all system — which is excessively common throughout the United States — is a huge problem, Reynolds pontificates, because “one party wins just half the votes but 100 percent of the power.” North Carolina Republicans have won so many elections in recent years that they have “a huge legislative majority” and “absolute veto-proof control.”

(Excerpt) Read more at dailycaller.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: northcarolina; snowflakesourgrapes
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To: maddog55

Last time I checked, there has been no wall erected around NC to keep people in, and no restrictions on leaving that particular state for another one that is “more democratic”. So what is holding this guy back?


41 posted on 12/31/2016 7:53:23 AM PST by left that other site (You shall know the Truth, and The Truth Shall Set You Free.)
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To: Gaffer

“The professor should consult the books and read what our nation is - a Constitutional Republic.”

But is the state a Constitutional Republic?


42 posted on 12/31/2016 8:16:50 AM PST by EQAndyBuzz (Too. Much. Winning.)
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To: EQAndyBuzz

See #$21. It was explicitly explained by another Freeper.


43 posted on 12/31/2016 8:17:58 AM PST by Gaffer
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To: maddog55

If i were him i would resign.


44 posted on 12/31/2016 8:19:29 AM PST by Leep (Stronger without her!)
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To: maddog55

Classic projection. Accuse the others of what you would do yourself if you could get away with it.


45 posted on 12/31/2016 8:26:11 AM PST by JimRed (Is it 1776 yet? TERM LIMITS, now and forever! Build the Wall, NOW!)
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To: nonsporting

While the federal govt is a republic, I have not considered whether individual states are required, as you state, or just guaranteed the freedom to choose. I am not sure I read “required” and “guaranteed” as the same thing. It seems like individuals in states would certainly want that. For example, it does not seem right that the city of Las Vegas basically dictates how the rest of the state must live since it has a higher population than all of the remainder of Nevada. This is where ballot initiatives can become a two edged sword.


46 posted on 12/31/2016 8:32:17 AM PST by Magnum44 (My comprehensive terrorism plan: Hunt them down and kill them)
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To: Gaffer

Please don’t trot out that tired, pedantic trope.
A republic form of government is a subset of democracy, not a sui generis construction.


47 posted on 12/31/2016 8:33:43 AM PST by sparklite2 (I'm less interested in the rights I have than the liberties I can take.)
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To: maddog55

Carolina? No surprise there.


48 posted on 12/31/2016 8:35:03 AM PST by moovova
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To: sparklite2

Yet you denigrate the meaning of the real difference in that distinction. In no way, shape or form is a mob-rule democracy the same as a republic governed by laws. While true that republic has aspects of democracy via representation by legislators, it patently cannot overrule (in theory) established laws for the protection of individual rights.

Your insistence in trying to equate the two without the very clear distinction is tired, pedantic trope also.


49 posted on 12/31/2016 8:41:10 AM PST by Gaffer
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To: maddog55

His bio per the UNC web site:

He is particularly interested in the presence and impact of minorities and marginalized communities.

He has worked for the United Nations, the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA), the UK Department for International Development, the US State Department, the National Democratic Institute, the International Republican Institute, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) and the International Foundation for Election Systems.

He has also served as a consultant on issues of electoral and constitutional design for Afghanistan, Angola, Burma, Egypt, Fiji, Guyana, Indonesia, Iraq, Jordan, Kenya, Lebanon, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Netherlands, Netherlands Antilles, Northern Ireland, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, Yemen, and Zimbabwe; most recently in Libya, Egypt and Burma. He has received research awards from the U.S. Institute of Peace, the National Science Foundation, the US Agency for International Development, and the Ford Foundation. Among his books are Designing Democracy in a Dangerous World (Oxford, 2011), The Architecture of Democracy: Constitutional Design, Conflict Management, and Democracy (Oxford, 2002), Electoral Systems and Democratization in Southern Africa (Oxford, 1999), Election 99 South Africa: From Mandela to Mbeki (St. Martin’s, 1999), and Elections and Conflict Management in Africa (USIP, 1998), co-edited with T. Sisk.

His forthcoming book Modest Harvest: Legacies and Limits of the Arab Spring (co-authored with Jason Brownlee [UT Austin] and Tarek Masoud [Harvard]) will be published by Oxford.

In 2012 he embarked on a two year research project to study the impact of LGBT national parliamentarians on public policy around the world. His articles have appeared in journals including the American Political Science Review, World Politics, Democratization, Politics and Society, Electoral Studies, Journal of Democracy, The Journal of Commonwealth and Comparative Politics, and Political Science Quarterly.

He has published opinion pieces in the New York Times, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, Christian Science Monitor, and San Diego Union Tribune. His work has been translated into French, Spanish, Arabic, Serbo-Croat, Albanian, Burmese, Thai and Portuguese.


50 posted on 12/31/2016 8:45:14 AM PST by tired&retired (Blessings)
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To: tired&retired

“In 2012 he embarked on a two year research project to study the impact of LGBT national parliamentarians on public policy around the world.”

Must have been for the Hillary State Department.


51 posted on 12/31/2016 8:46:37 AM PST by tired&retired (Blessings)
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To: maddog55
When this story first came out last week, I did a comparison of the North Carolina and Massachusetts legislatures (both houses). The results were something like this:

North Carolina: 123-R, 68-D.

Massachusetts: 159-D, 40-R.

"Non-democratic" North Carolina was about 61% Republican, but "democratic" Massachusetts was nearly 80% Democrat.
52 posted on 12/31/2016 9:02:09 AM PST by Steve_Seattle
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To: maddog55

Notice he doesn’t say that about California, where Hillary won 66% of the vote.

Commies will be commies. They can see the splinter in another’s eye but can’t see the beam in their own.


53 posted on 12/31/2016 11:26:23 AM PST by Freedom_Is_Not_Free (The GOP will see the light, because Trump will make them feel the heat.)
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To: Tax-chick
don’t tell them

Oh, but I do! I don't hide my meager role in the campaign!

54 posted on 12/31/2016 11:45:52 AM PST by Ace's Dad ("America is Great because America is Good " Alexis de Tocqueville)
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To: Gaffer
See #21

Excellent. That's what I like about FR.

Thanks.

55 posted on 12/31/2016 11:54:17 AM PST by super7man (Madam Defarge, knitting, knitting, always knitting)
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To: maddog55

I find it amusing that any professor at UNCheat can grieve about anything outside their own university bounds. Their athletic department has engaged in wholesale cheating for 30 years to keep their black slave athletes academically eligible to keep the sports revenue flowing. (See the recent NCAA amended Notice of Allegations) Maybe he should stay in his own backyard and try to make his difference in the world.

Screw this pompous hypocrite.

Dean’s Myth lives....


56 posted on 12/31/2016 11:58:20 AM PST by nesnah (Liberals - the petulant children of politics)
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To: tired&retired

So he’s basically a UN loving socialist liberal faggot.


57 posted on 12/31/2016 1:28:01 PM PST by maddog55 (America Rising)
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To: maddog55
has concluded that political conditions in North Carolina are comparable to political conditions in totalitarian nations such as Cuba, Venezuela and Iran because Republicans are too politically successful.

Cool. Let's throw his ass in a gulag.

58 posted on 12/31/2016 1:42:58 PM PST by SIDENET (My next tagline will be so awesome.)
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To: nesnah

My thoughts exactly. And that school is filled with morons. I’m in NC and every day there is more crap from this school. I am sick of it. He is not going to go away anytime soon. He’s a controversial jerk. He thinks that there was a legislative coup because the legislator upheld the transgender thing. He is the head of the LGBTQ group there on campus. But a well-respected man on the campus. Well respected for all the wrong reasons.


59 posted on 12/31/2016 1:59:55 PM PST by C21NO
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To: maddog55

I live in North Carolina, and I was just the other day commenting (secretly so as no one in the regime could hear) to my assigned wife that the labor camp I have to work in seven days a week only served rice with maggots once a day with a cup of water. The rest of our sustanance was gotten by standing in long lines for our government rations at least six hours a day. I also mentioned my neighbor being dragged away from his home for re-education. I hope I’ll see him again.

Oh, wait, is that the sounds of boots kicking my door?


60 posted on 12/31/2016 6:35:14 PM PST by Magnatron
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