That's the entire frigging point. You generally will have to get some people on both sides to agree about something before it goes through, which will result in legislation acceptable to a much larger number of people and less likely to infringe on anyone.
a) This whole political dualism thing runs right down to your core, doesn't it. "Both sides" my ass. There are a billion sides to any issue.
b) My original point was that this cut down dramatically on the influence of third parties. It seems we've agreed that it does (since any legislation in a fragmented legislature is going to require the agreement of at least some in the other major party). Since you've come this far with me, can you now see that
i) this disincentivises voting for 3rd parties (they'd be better off not splitting the vote at the polls)
leading to
ii) the two party system the US is locked into
which causes
iii) voter apathy and the lack of an effective voice for minority opinions
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