Let's just institute a permanent fix.
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Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — Politics
Soul_Venom — 7 months ago(August 09, 2025 12:59 PM)
Let's just institute a permanent fix.
You said:
California and Texas are engaged in a redistricting fight. Accusations of gerrymandering abound. Could AI create a fair and unbiased redistricting plan with sufficient information that would pull the teeth out of this fight?
ChatGPT5 said:
Yes — in theory, AI could create a much fairer redistricting plan than most current political processes, but only if we set the rules clearly, provide the right data, and make the process fully transparent.
Here’s what that would look like:- Inputs AI Would Need
High-resolution population data (from the Census, down to census blocks).
Geographic boundaries (counties, cities, school districts, natural features).
Legal requirements (Voting Rights Act compliance, state constitutional provisions, court rulings).
Nonpartisan criteria: compactness, equal population, keeping communities of interest intact, minimizing splits of political subdivisions. - How AI Could Be Made Neutral
Predefined criteria: The AI can’t “decide” what’s fair — humans must agree on the ranking/weight of rules beforehand.
Multiple algorithmic approaches: e.g., shortest-splitline, simulated annealing, or ensemble maps from thousands of random valid configurations to find the median result.
Open-source code & public audits: Anyone can verify there’s no hidden bias in the algorithm.
Blind input: Remove any partisan voting data from the process unless legally required (e.g., to protect minority representation). - Why It Could “Pull the Teeth” Out of the Fight
Transparency: All steps and criteria are public, so accusations of secret bias are harder to stick.
Reproducibility: Anyone can run the same code with the same data and get the same map.
Data-driven fairness metrics: Compactness scores, population deviation, and split counts can be published alongside the map. - Limitations
Criteria Disputes: Even with AI, humans still fight over what counts as fair — e.g., is it more important to keep counties whole or to maximize competitiveness?
Hidden Bias in Criteria: “Neutral” rules can still have partisan effects (e.g., compactness can disadvantage certain urban/rural distributions).
Legal & Political Buy-in: Without laws mandating AI adoption, legislatures can ignore it.
Court Challenges Remain: Opponents may still sue over minority representation, boundary definitions, or perceived effects.
Bottom line
If California and Texas agreed to a shared, transparent, algorithmic mapping process with human-approved criteria, AI could produce maps that are measurably less biased than current political maps. The real obstacle isn’t whether AI can do it — it’s whether politicians are willing to hand over that control.
If you want, I can show a real example of how an AI-generated “ensemble” map could be built for Texas or California so you can see what “fair” might look like in practice. This would make it clear how much partisan tilt is baked into current maps.
Trump is still your President. Charlie Kirk still Wins!
- Inputs AI Would Need
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She's Got Marty Feldman Eyes — 7 months ago(August 11, 2025 03:22 PM)
Jinx by me a coke I almost posted the identical message to you!
[Lol]
I find his willingness to hand over governmental control to AI ironically troublesome too. Seems a far stretch for someone that literally believes in the mark of the beast.
All of kno is imma about to ask got to make me a map. -
AnthonySocksss — 7 months ago(August 09, 2025 05:59 PM)
Let’s not forget to wish happy birthday to this fine ass sexy bitch
Melton1 Wanted for Pedophilia:
https://i.ibb.co/6cnPmJVr/IMG-0830.jpg
https://m.youtube.com/shorts/Zjxk307CND0



