Highest Rated Comments


Siege-Torpedo18 karma

It's only statistically impossible if you're not looking at the actual statistics. Different demographics vote at different times. Democratic demographics tend younger and more working class, and since election day isn't a national holiday they're more likely to vote absentee. They also tend to live in cities, which take longer to count all the ballots.

And you're only looking at it when the Republicans lose out. Democrats were up in early voting in 2016 and 2018. How did they somehow lose then?

Siege-Torpedo12 karma

Severely censored means not getting to have multiple posts on r/all every day. Oh please, grow up.

Siege-Torpedo9 karma

Are you talking nation-wide? Because if you are, you should look at national trends. Look in the big late ballot states of Arizona and California. They've always had lots of late absentee ballots, and the numbers have always gone Democrat. Hillary, for example, went from -6 in AZ to -3 when all was counted

This is just the first election in those races (Cali house, AZ statewide,) where the races have been close enough to be decided by the late ballots. And they've been decided big, Sinema is up by a full 2% in AZ senate, while the remaining races are getting further separation.

And it's not always. Mia Love was down on E-day, now she's up. Clearly, Gillum and Bill Nelson don't have enough 'magic' absentees to win.

Siege-Torpedo4 karma

Our country was designed by the founding fathers to be as slow as possible in changing. They feared radicals, and radical change. the French Revolution showed them why.

Siege-Torpedo3 karma

What universities are you looking for, if any?