Elections in the U.S. are weird. So many of them aren't measured in the number of people who vote for a candidate but instead are measured in how many points a campaign can score. The most famous example of this is the Electoral College. But we're well into the Democratic presidential primary, and it has its own set of points: "delegates". The goal for each campaign is still to get the most votes possible but the winner isn't as simple as that. The winner is the person who can get to 1,991 de...