Russ says:

I still seem to hear a lot of
moaning by Libertarians and Greens about being ignored by the media and
being shut out of the debates -- as if the problem would go away if the
media started giving them equal coverage with the major parties. I think
that indicates a fundamental lack of understanding of the real problem
they face.

I comment:

Actually, fair media coverage would do much toward eliminating the problem that Plurality causes. If the Libertarians and Greens say that fair coverage would give them a fair chance, there's much to what they say, though a better voting system would be good too.

Never mind equal coverage. Suppose that parties, candidates, &/or organizations, etc. were in some way given their fair share of media time. Media time in proportion to some measure of public support. That could be signatures on petitions, etc.

Obvioiusly I've sketched out a general type of system, rather than an exact proposal.

What would happen? Immediately, when the Greens or Nader-ists began getting their share, their petition-signatures percentage would improve. That would give them a bigger media share, which would increase their petition percentage, and so on... Until they reach their rightful equilibrium percentage of media time.

Plurality does an excellent job of concealing what people want. Opponents of campaign reform should like Plurality. Without Plurality, their monetary free-speech would lose its power.

By the way, why would someone we know want a better voting system, when the presidential rank polls show his favorite as Condorcet loser, and Nader as Condorcet winner?

But, even with Plurality, the kind of fair coverage that I describe above would un-conceal what people want, and give people a better chance to hear about what other people want...and not just from the corporate-owned media apparatus that defines what is "mainstream", and "viable", and where the "middle" is (It's always between the Republican and the Democrat :-) ), and tells us what the (indistinguishable) "two choices" are. Actually the words "two" and "choices" should both be in quotes separately, because effectively they're one alternative, not two, and they don't represent any meaningful choice between them.

Mike Ossipoff

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