The Centre for Housing and Support (CHS) has been at the forefront of training within the housing sector for more than 25 years. With one of the widest ranges of specialist t... GCS Training is the colleges business training a...
Map & Directions Photos & Video The New York Hall of Science features more interactive exhibits than any other New York Science Museum The New York Hall of Science was originally opened as a Pavilion at the 1964 World's Fair in the borough of Queens. Today it houses over 450 fun and exciting exhibits that make learning fun for visitors of all ages. The majority of attractions at the 1964 World's Fair were closed down at the conclusion of the fair. However, the Science Museum remained open and, while its exhibits where much more limited than what they are today, it served as a valuable resource to students and to the community until it was finally shut down in 1979 for a major renovation. After seven years of extensive work the hall reopened in 1986 and was almost an instant success which led to even more funding and expansions over the following decades. The fun begins before you even enter the museum. Who wouldn't be captivated by the Gemini II Titan Rocket, the Mercury-Atlas D Rocket or the Mercury Space Capsule in Rocket Park outside the museum.
You could apportion the voting power multiplier by an index of population per congressperson with whatever state was lowest set as 1 vote or you could apportion it by a simple formula based on population ranking like this: Vote multiplier = (state population rank + 19) / 20 However, I do not advocate for this type of system either. One vote per person is fundamentally more fair. 2. People claim that under a popular vote system candidates would ignore everywhere but the most populous areas. Under the current system candidates only have an incentive to campaign in swing states, how is that any better than the imagined problem of candidates only campaigning in populous areas? For example if Hillary Clinton could have changed 73, 515 minds in Florida and Arizona in 2016 she would have won the whole election. On the other hand convincing 100, 000 Trump voters in Idaho to switch their vote would have gained her nothing. 375 out of 399 campaign events in 2016 took place in just 12 states. Half of all states had no candidate events during the Presidential election (not counting primaries which are a whole other unrelated issue).