hatman: HatMan, my alter ego and face on the 'net (Default)
([personal profile] hatman Oct. 26th, 2008 09:59 pm)
I guess I've been busy this weekend. Hope I haven't spammed you guys too much. But there's something I've been meaning to post, and I'd like to do it before I forget. It's a good thing to remember...



There are no red states or blue states. Only purple. (And Washington, D.C.)

From: [identity profile] dave7.livejournal.com


That's... um... very pretty. (I'm guessing this has something to do with the elections?)
ext_3159: HatMan (Default)

From: [identity profile] pgwfolc.livejournal.com


There are various symbols for the two (main) political parties in the US. Color-wise, Republicans/conservatives are red and Democrats/liberals are blue. There's talk about "red states" (which predominantly vote Republican) and "blue states" (which predominantly vote Democratic). It comes out more because we have the electoral college system which means that for presidential elections states vote collectively. (It's a stupid system, IMO, and it doesn't do what it was designed to do, but it's not likely to change anytime soon.)

It can be divisive. An "us vs them" mentality. The map (as explained on the page it came from - clicking on the map will also link you there) is colored based on the '04 presidential election. We're used to seeing such maps with the states colored as wholly red or blue, depending on where its electoral votes went. This one is based on the popular vote totals, a proportionate mixture of red and blue. It's a reminder that we're not so different, after all.

From: [identity profile] schnuffichen.livejournal.com


Aaaaah... okay. Yeah, I went to the page and read that stuff but it didn't really make too much sense to me.

But, uh, yeah, okay... it's probably because I'm not part of the system.
I never quite understood our voting system either but I think it's more straight forward, so... thanks for the explanation :)
ext_3159: HatMan (Default)

From: [identity profile] pgwfolc.livejournal.com


There are various symbols for the two (main) political parties in the US. Color-wise, Republicans/conservatives are red and Democrats/liberals are blue. There's talk about "red states" (which predominantly vote Republican) and "blue states" (which predominantly vote Democratic). It comes out more because we have the electoral college system which means that for presidential elections states vote collectively. (It's a stupid system, IMO, and it doesn't do what it was designed to do, but it's not likely to change anytime soon.)

It can be divisive. An "us vs them" mentality. The map (as explained on the page it came from - clicking on the map will also link you there) is colored based on the '04 presidential election. We're used to seeing such maps with the states colored as wholly red or blue, depending on where its electoral votes went. This one is based on the popular vote totals, a proportionate mixture of red and blue. It's a reminder that we're not so different, after all.
.

Profile

hatman: HatMan, my alter ego and face on the 'net (Default)
hatman

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags