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Or maybe it's a problem that people spread across such a vast area have the kind of political power over each other that the federal govt. yields? A lot of this is a fundamental issue in political structuring & power distribution, not in the balancing of votes.
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Given that acreage has no human aspiration or agency, and that a healthy democracy or republic grants each citizen equal political franchise, this map is an argument against the electoral college. Unless land itself is now forever to be our metric for citizenry. twitter.com/Liz_Wheeler/st…
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In Norway we have weighted regional voting favouring smaller, less populated areas, and sparsely populated northern Norway still gets shafted. It's fundamentally a problem when some bureaucrat in Oslo, almost 3000 km away, can decide if "those northerners" need e.g. railways...
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And this is *with* Norway having fairly strong devolution of powers to county and regional levels. It simply isn't always the right things that get devolved, and the extreme centralising urge of the state often can't be fought without doing more harm than good.
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A lot of the political division in Poland, my other home, is driven by the country having two sets of political identities. The split is geographical, right down the middle of the country. Those parts, they... don't mix.