yep, knew this was coming. it is worthless. it is a treasonous disrespect for the rule of law and the election process. i don't give a fuck if they get 50 million votes on some fucktard liberal plea to compel members of the electoral college to renege on their obligation 
what assholes .. sore losers fuck 'em 
i completely disagree with this libtard hack's take on the true purpose of the electoral college. it's purpose then and now is to balance the large urban cities vs the rural ares of the country. without it most of rural America would have no vote. 
the electoral college .. barring extraordinary developments .. not gonna happen .. or won't turn out to be true .. the college is nothing more than a re-affirmation of the 50 stare's voting. 
 
https://www.yahoo.com/tv/stars-join-...232046981.html
Stars Join ‘Hail Mary’ Movement Attempting To Deny Donald Trump The Presidency
David Robb
DeadlineNovember 11, 2016
Dozens of celebrities including 
Lady Gaga, Rosie Perez, Amanda Seyfried and 
Marg Helgenberger and Pink have added their names to a long-shot movement underway to legally deny 
Donald Trump the presidency. Three days after the election, they and more than 2.7 million Americans have signed a Change.org 
petition calling on Republican electors to switch their votes and make Hillary Clinton president.
Although  it’s allowed under the Constitution, the “Hail Mary” effort has little  to no chance of succeeding because actually turning the votes of  electors probably is more firmly rooted in fantasy. Still, the effort to  keep Trump out of the White House is more evidence of the growing  dissatisfaction with the election’s outcome. And though
The former 
Apprentice star 
won the majority of electors, even though Clinton appears to have won the popular vote, but his election won’t be official until December 19, when the 
Electoral College meets in each of the 50 states and Washington, D.C., to cast their votes for president and vice president.

Copyright  2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not  be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.  Mandatory Credit: Photo by Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP/REX/Shutterstock  (7429706t) Barack Obama, Donald Trump President Barack Obama and  President-elect Donald Trump shake hands following their meeting in the  Oval Office of the White House in Washington Obama Trump, Washington,  USA - 10 Nov 2016
Votes  still are being counted, but the electoral map suggests that Trump will  finish with 306 electors to Clinton’s 232. But that margin of victory  could be erased, and the election handed to Clinton, if 38 of those 306  Republican electors switch their votes. And prior to the election,  several of them indicated that they just might do so if Trump won.
And  it doesn’t matter that Clinton has conceded or that President Obama  already has met in the White House to congratulate President-elect  Trump. The electors still will meet in state capitals all across the  country in five weeks to confirm, or overturn, the voters’ decision. And  if 38 Republican electors change their votes, Clinton would be  president-elect.
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“On December 19, the electors of the Electoral College will cast their ballots,”
 the petition states. “If they all vote the way their states voted,  Donald Trump will win. However, they can vote for Hillary Clinton if  they choose. We are calling on the electors to ignore their states’  votes and cast their ballots for Secretary Clinton.”
Long  derided as an archaic and undemocratic 18th century throwback, the  Electoral College was designed for an election just such as this: a  last-chance check-and-balance to undo a vote in which the people might  have made elected a popular but unqualified demagogue who threatened to  lock up his political opponent.
Unlike  Brexit, where the British people weren’t given a second chance to  reconsider what they’d done, the Electoral College was designed by the  Founding Fathers as a last chance do-over —  a second election to make  sure the first one wasn’t a gigantic mistake.
The  role of the Electoral College was established in Article II, Section 1,  of the U.S. Constitution, which states: “Each state shall appoint, in  such manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a number of electors,  equal to the whole number of Senators and Representatives to which the  State may be entitled in the Congress: but no Senator or Representative,  or person holding an office of trust or profit under the United States,  shall be appointed an elector.”
The  Founders’ intention was that the Electoral College would serve as a  second election, just as valid as the first. As Alexander Hamilton wrote  in the Federalist Papers: “It was equally desirable that the immediate  election should be made by men most capable of analyzing the qualities  adapted to the station, and acting under circumstances favorable to  deliberation, and to a judicious combination of all the reasons and  inducements which were proper to govern their choice. A small number of  persons, selected by their fellow-citizens from the general mass, will  be most likely to possess the information and discernment requisite to  such complicated investigations.”
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That  “complicated investigation” is now in the hands of the 306 Republican  electors, who must decide during the next five weeks whether they really  want Trump as Commander in Chief with access to the nuclear codes.
All  of the electors were selected long before the election, chosen at state  conventions or through votes of the parties’ central committees.  They’re all regular folks – nurses and lawyers, real estate agents and  teachers – and it’s in their hands that the fate of the country now  rests.
There  is no federal law that requires electors to cast their votes for their  pledged candidate, and 29 states have no laws compelling them to do so.  Seventeen of those states that went for Trump, including Texas, Arizona,  Missouri and Indiana, have a total of 172 Republican electors. Twelve  other states that Trump won – including Florida and Ohio – have laws  against what are called “faithless electors,” but no elector has ever  been prosecuted for failing to vote as pledged, and it’s happened 67  times since 1796.