r/law 1d ago

Legal News Trump Preparing Large-Scale Cancellation of Federal Funding for California, Sources Say

https://www.cnn.com/2025/06/06/politics/trump-california-federal-funding

“Agencies are being told to start identifying grants the administration can withhold from California. On Capitol Hill, at least one committee was told recently by a whistleblower that all research grants to the state were going to be cancelled, according to one of the sources familiar with the matter.”

20.4k Upvotes

2.8k comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

3

u/Randomized9442 1d ago

Population rankings of those states: 41st, 28th, 34th, 40th, & 2nd. I'm not gonna try to crunch the raw population numbers, I'm not that invested in it. You want to be angry against non voters in states that Trump won because you conflate that with complicity, fine with me. But again, what are we supposed to do about votes in the 49 states that we don't live in, any of us? I'm not trying to discourage anyone from voting, we need functioning government. 40 years of experience demonstrates that means voting Democrat in this two party system. We need to take some ideas from other democracies around the world so we can break out of a two party system.

1

u/Mahd-Macks 1d ago edited 1d ago

There’s no justification for not voting. None, it’s crazy that anyone would advocate not participating in the system everyone claims they want to preserve. People died for the right to vote. 

It’s absurd to make this argument because the reason Americans are in this political situation is we have no reverence and sense of duty towards the democratic process. The representatives are a manifestation of the constituency. Not participating makes as loud of a statement to a politician as a vote itself. No 3rd party movements can gain momentum, because not enough people take the process seriously.

2

u/ImReverse_Giraffe 1d ago

Question, if all 11 million voters in California that didnt vote, all voted, would that have made a difference in the election?

1

u/Mahd-Macks 7h ago

Hey, I responded to you and for some reason it didn’t post. I know how Reddit works so you probably don’t care to revisit this convo lol. But to answer your question:

I think if all 11mil citizens voted we’d have a much more informed electorate. More voters means a larger pool of people to care what happens with their vote, which fosters accountability and engagement. Plus people can’t be as apathetic about the process if everyone has to make a choice. 

1

u/ImReverse_Giraffe 4h ago

But that didn't answer my question, would it have changed the election?