Well that and the fact that just about anyone can get elected to the House of Representatives. The House cranks out crazy legislation, the Senate moderates that legislation into something the "in the camera" politicians can sell to their constituents.
And it makes sense. The House of Reps is huge, debate is chaotic and the lack of interest by the public in what the House of Reps is up to gives them a lot more freedom to propose things without fear of a backlash.
The Senate is (well it used to be anyways) calmer, with fewer talking heads supposedly resulting in more focused debate. Unfortunately, both houses have been hijacked by grandstanding and obstructionism these days, from both parties The House was always that way, but now the Senate is increasingly becoming that way too.
Bottomline though, the responsibility has always rested with the American public. Their representatives doing things like calling the president a liar in the middle of his speech, embezzling and cheating their way to riches (Hi Rangel), seeking gay sex in a bathroom while claiming to support family values.....Americans have to care enough about this shit not to re-elect the same people to office. It's easy to blame the system for producing these people, but when we see them in the legislature year after year, doing the same shit, we have no one to blame but ourselves. I'm not going all Tea Party here, but there's honestly a level of behavior we SAY we expect out of politicians, but fail to hold them accountable for. Particularly when the objectionable thing they're doing is bound to something we DO want.
Case in point. If you want to say the president should be the most moral person in the country, the last three sitting presidents all should not have held office. If you say you don't want your representatives to be held hostage by the process, a large chunk of the current democratic senators should be shown the door. If you say you just want your reps to get something done, to fix the fucking mess we're in, damn near all the Republicans that survived their election challenge should be thrown out on their asses.
And such a system doesn't allow the opposite to happen?
A bridge to nowhere is not the same as linking the entire national budget to the mega budgets of the largest states and cities, who also tend to run the biggest deficits and spend the most in one sitting. I'm not about to sign up for subsidizing California's run away fucking debt, or to pay for another 30 palm trees to be planted in a goddamn desert.
So there isn't a tendancy of smaller states to vote for a particular "party x"? Really?
When that's how the representation shook out, yes. It's funny you're all about your own rights as they pertain to your state, while ignoring that other states came to their beliefs along the exact same route. Their beliefs are sovereign, even if you don't agree with them. Thus their states overall political identity is sovereign, no matter how backasswards it seems to you.
Well, yeah, it promotes "discussion and compromise" in that it hands much more voting power to certain people.
Again. You act as though you're politically marginalized now, in a system where YOU may get more voting power than your actually "deserve." Yet you want to politically marginalize someone else to fix that. That's pretty much textbook politics.