Notice how those in favour of STV talk about the benefits of PR.
STV is NOT PR
WTF? Every unbiased literature I've read classifies it as PR. Oh, that's right. It's not "PURE" PR. Give me a fucking break. Take a look at the election results from
Northern Ireland and
Malta. Notice how a parties share of a seats closely reflects its share of the popular vote, around 3-4% agreement.
Now compare that to FPTP. Take a look at the last ten provincial elections. In almost every case, deviations of 10%, 20%, and more are the norm. Nobody claimed STV was perfect, just that it's more proportional than FPTP. There's no comparison.
In fact, the few countries that use STV have found that often the people who get the most votes don't get elected.
Total bullshit, a candidate gets elected when they reach the threshold required for election.
In BC that sort of thing would happen all the time under STV. For example:
Suppose you need 10,000 votes to get elected and the vote tallies look like this:
9999 people vote for the liberal candidate and put no other choices because they don't want the NDP or the green at all.
5001 people put the Green candidate with the NDP candidate as their second choice
5000 people put the NDP candidate with the green candidate as their second choice
Guess who gets elected under STD?
Yep, the NDP candidate who was the first choice of the FEWEST voters.
Great system.
Oh great, can't come up with a real life example so come up with a stupid theoretical scenario so unlikely that it's absurd. Here's one for you:
Let's say we have 10,000 voters and 100 candidates and each candidate gets 100 votes.
Guess how gets elected under FPTP? Nobody! Yep, great system. The fact is we play around with any system of voting and come up with absurd scenarios. The only difference is that under FPTP, the absurdities actually happen on a regular basis.
Also look it up, in Malta, one of the FEW countries that uses it,
Yes, lets look at Malta. They've had four cases where a party won more seats than the other with less of the popular vote. In all cases, the separation in popular vote between the parties was less than 3% and share of the seats were just as close, within 1%.
Now compare that to our system. Again, go through the last 10 elections in BC alone, election results don't need to be close for misrepresentations of voters intentions to occur, they just happen, with surprising regularity. And don't even get me started on our federal election results.
It's easy to criticize a system against perfection but we're not doing that. We're comparing STV vs FPTP.
Strategic voting is when a moron actually has a glimmer of insight into the fact that anyone with the same ideas they have is also a moron and won't get elected so they vote for someone who is too smart to agree with their stupid ideas even though it really bugs them to vote for someone smarter than they are. No wonder it bugs them so much, they have to admit to themselves that someone else is actually smarter than they are and they have a real problem doing that because their heads are so far up their asses that they don't even realize that EVERYONE is smarter than they are.
Oh that's right, because if the majority believe something, then they automatically must be right. Kind of like views on racism, or gay rights, or decriminalization of MJ, or pooning. Who needs to think for themselves, just follow the masses.