Comments

Los Angeles Times Carries Op-Ed Advocating Proportional Representation for California — 9 Comments

  1. Men United Under “Vote Opposite Gender #1”
    http://usparliament.org/ss11-unity-platform.php

    Several males in the “8th California Super-state
    Parliament” have opted to vote for the “Unity
    Platform California”.

    The top elected plank on the Unity Platform
    California is “Opposite gender #1, with consecutively
    alternating genders thereafter.”

    We ask that all men please consider our plan, when
    you walk into the voting booth to vote on June 5th,
    2018, you voluntarily consider to vote FIRST for our
    opposite gender #1, then 2nd consider a vote for a
    candidate of same gender, followed by consecutively
    alternating genders thereafter.

    This is a policy elected by our team, that insures a
    50/50 partnership with both genders. Should
    2/3rds of the California voters voluntarily collaborate
    to vote for our opposite gender, then California is
    guaranteed 50/50 gender balance on all elected California
    seats in 2018.
    * * *

  2. A NEW Policy for Women

    Our team asks all men, including Mike Feinstein [Green] for SoS, to consider voting for our opposite gender #1.

    Women candidates need a voice and we need to bring the female gender better representation in all elections, where they are prohibited for being election fairly under plurality single-winner districts. By showing a new policy towards our opposite gender first, then we may attract votes as males being a second choice.

    The SF Chronicle and Google Don’t Want You to Know that in 1997 Google Launched Off United Coalition.

    The San Francisco Chronicle and Google Inc. have both
    coincidently worked to snuff out any news of the United
    Coalition.

    The San Francisco Chronicle protected the public from
    knowing that Google derived their name and launched off
    the back of our team. The reporter was given the tip
    and she correctly reported that Google misspelled googol
    but she didn’t disclose that it happened within the conversation
    of the United Coalition in Usenet where google.com name
    reserver, Sergie Brin, joined our conversation in 1997:
    http://usparliament.org/how-google-got-its-name.php

    Brin’s Google Co. later bought Usenet’s DejaNews, changed
    its name to Google Groups, and deleted the evidence and the
    United Coalition’s conversation in Usenet while working with
    Green Party bully Cameron Spitzer.

    The journalists at the San Francisco don’t want you
    to know that the ranked choice voting (RCV) in single-winner
    districts has created a one-party system in SF which
    is used as the “power-base” for one political party.

    2012 United Coalition California

    A reporter of the California elections in 2012, Josh Richman, wrote stories
    about California politics and about many of the 2012 State candidates,
    his articles which were published in the Oakland Tribune, SF Chronicle
    and San Jose Mercury News.

    But names of the United Coalition California were never printed in
    black ink, nor written in any newspaper which carried his work, so
    we cannot expect to get fair treatment in 2018.

    Josh Richman is currently employed with Congressman
    Eric Swalwell [Democratic] CA CD 15.
    * * *

  3. How long, oh Richard, how long, must your readers suffer? Please put some limits on James Ogle.

  4. I can’t understand the problem…just don’t read comments when you see the name.

  5. Great article. I’d say that Mr Feinstein is the most impressive candidate for California Secretary of State ever but there have pro-voter political process reformers in times past.

  6. Richard: They tend to be far too long. It is a “pain” to have to scroll down through them to find/see some real comments.

  7. Folks are free to create their own websites and censor the contents.

    ie – the *politically correct* CENSORED BAN.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.