If #4 isn't eliminate gerrymandering, you haven't come close to solving the problem.
If #4 isn't eliminate gerrymandering, you haven't come close to solving the problem.
1.) Define "pork." The federal government spends a lot of money on a lot of different things.
Our forefathers had trades, mostly to which they returned after holding office.
What if you agree with the incumbent politically? Should you still vote them out for some arbitrary reason?
Was that the original thinking? It's not like the Constitution places any limit on Congressional terms. And I'm pretty sure Congresspeople in the 18th and 19th century stayed in the House and Senate for as long as they could.
But the tendency to keep incumbents around forever despite not liking them, on a larger scale, is part of a political inertia that—paired with some pretty shameless but effective gerrymandering—has all but doomed us to a Republican-majority House of Representatives for what some arm-flailing analysts (and the New York…
Never played it before, so it's original to me. I'm sure a lot of people can say the same. You don't have to buy it, of course.
Okay. Here's how this works:
Do you really not realize that large-scale surveys of street harassment victims exist? We do have data. There is no excuse for relying on singular, personal anecdotes.
We do have facts to back up the concept of street harassment. We even have some data on who is most likely to be harassed. http://www.stopstreetharassment.org/wp-content/upl…
We don't know this at all, unless you happen to be omniscient. And if you are, I have so many other questions...
No, it really isn't. I'm sorry you're having so much trouble grasping a simple concept.
Unless you have statistics to prove it, you can't make that statement and expect to be taken seriously.
Everyone has different experiences. I work in Boston, and I'm constantly seeing older, white construction workers pull the same thing on women who walk by them. I see no reason to think that this is somehow unique to minorities.
I didn't know schools were adopting them. Definitely cheaper than all the iPads I see schools buying.
I didn't know schools were adopting them. Definitely cheaper than all the iPads I see schools buying.
That's exactly how I use mine. My main computer is basically for gaming, and I take my Chromebook to and from work.
That's exactly how I use mine. My main computer is basically for gaming, and I take my Chromebook to and from work.
She'll probably be fine with Google Docs, and you can change the background to anything you want. That said, she might want to look into Spotify or Google Music, or any other streaming music service. But if she can do that, then it will probably be a great computer.
She'll probably be fine with Google Docs, and you can change the background to anything you want. That said, she…
I got an Acer Chromebook 11 recently, which is a smaller version of the one in this article (and only $200). I mostly use it for work, since we do everything with Google services. It works fine. I got it to replace my iPad, figuring I'd rather spend $200 on something with a keyboard than $5-600 on another tablet.
I got an Acer Chromebook 11 recently, which is a smaller version of the one in this article (and only $200). I…
America: Land of the free and home of the completely terrified at all times.