If it weren't for the Iowa caucus fuckery, the pre-Super Tuesday ratfuck, or even if they just had all States vote on the same day, Biden would not have won.
As a New Jersian I'm essentially disenfranchised from this process entirely. Since the invention of radio there's been absolutely no excuse not to hold all the votes on the same day. The way we cater to states like Iowa and South Carolina is a deliberate scheme to water down the nomination.
Not to dive too deep into the red state blue state culture war shit, but it is pretty insane that the Democrats allow Republican strongholds to choose their leadership.
The Iowa primary always being first an ingenious way to guarantee big ag never has to deal with a president hostile to subsidies that allow them to waste massive amounts of food. Small farmers who might have benefited from these subsidies are almost all functionally the debt serfs of these giant companies now, chained to part of the food supply chain. Monsanto, Purdue, etc. can always invoke the struggling small farmer to argue for the subsidization of their crops and livestock production to make them profitable, the same way billionaires invoke the imagery of the scrappy entrepreneur or small business owner to make lowering their taxes sound palatable.
If it weren't for the Iowa caucus fuckery, the pre-Super Tuesday ratfuck, or even if they just had all States vote on the same day, Biden would not have won.
As a New Jersian I'm essentially disenfranchised from this process entirely. Since the invention of radio there's been absolutely no excuse not to hold all the votes on the same day. The way we cater to states like Iowa and South Carolina is a deliberate scheme to water down the nomination.
Not to dive too deep into the red state blue state culture war shit, but it is pretty insane that the Democrats allow Republican strongholds to choose their leadership.
The Iowa primary always being first an ingenious way to guarantee big ag never has to deal with a president hostile to subsidies that allow them to waste massive amounts of food. Small farmers who might have benefited from these subsidies are almost all functionally the debt serfs of these giant companies now, chained to part of the food supply chain. Monsanto, Purdue, etc. can always invoke the struggling small farmer to argue for the subsidization of their crops and livestock production to make them profitable, the same way billionaires invoke the imagery of the scrappy entrepreneur or small business owner to make lowering their taxes sound palatable.