Your accusation is the confession, but as I repeat I am not the one opposed to peaceful coexistence here. I'm not the one you should be accosting if you care about the things you profess to.
How do you not perceive any tension between on one hand implicitly treating Republicans as rabid animals who cannot possibly be expected to change their behavior (not that such a framing would suffer on the merits) and on the other demanding that liberals unilaterally navigate the resulting worldscape with an (inevitably deferential) eye toward supplicating said Republicans? It would be easier to interpret your comments as naivete alone if you didn't have the shameful record you do.
It's what you did. I showed you what it looks like from another angle. You're being doubly foolish.A nice weaseling out attempt. Instead of admitting it when your ignorance became patent you just say that your purpose of giving analogies didn't presuppose awareness of the subject.
You're right, thanks. In the depths of your smarmy condescension bother to absorb what people other than yourself write; it is certain they will understand something you don't. If I refer to you a fatal error, oversight, or misapprehension in your offering but you double down without due regard and compound absurdities and untruths one with another, you terminate the possibility of meaningful communication.If I'm so unserious and my opinion is just a drivel why are you getting so nervous trying to prove your point? And if it outs me, why do you keep answering at all?
As Osita Nwanevu said, "In the end, our hopes should lie not in the dream of transcending our political battles but in the possibility that we might win them."So you don't wish to live next door to Republicans or traveling to Florida for a vacation to meet them in a roadside cafe. And? What are you gonna do about it? This is the question that you fail to answer. And this is the crucial question for those who believe that after Biden's victory Republican voters could be just disregarded, segregated, discriminated, and pushed into the background.
That would appear to be your own posture and preference, or like that of a teacher who rewards the bully and rebukes the victim for "fighting." But I reposted a long Twitter thread all about that, which you naturally didn't engage with. Let me know when Ukraine stops provoking Putin with its territorial aggression and becomes a good neighbor in the international community.It's like a bully grabs an arm of his victim and hits him with the hand repeating "Why are you hitting yourself?" I thought that you were an adult person.
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I can't resist reposting this one when you're almost literally asserting a duty on our part - the 'Men of the West' - to engineer coexistence with the ringwraiths, orcs, and goblins of the land.
I may be just an ordinary orc, but I wasn’t at all surprised when the Dark Lord Sauron became the leader of Mordor. A lot of my smart, liberal friends, though, reacted as if Middle-earth was coming to an end. Dwarves in the barroom of the Prancing Pony said it was the pride of the High Elves. Ravens twittering under the eaves of Mirkwood blamed the cunning of dragons. The Steward of Gondor, posting on FacePalantir, said it was because of Sauron’s hatred for the heirs of Isildur.
I’m here to tell you: it’s the economy, stupid.
It’s all very well for those of you who dwell in the Shire, the haven of Rivendell, or the quiet forests of Lothlórien. You live in a bubble. You don’t know what life is like for the average orc, in depressed areas like the Trollshaws, the Misty Mountains, or the Dead Marshes. Let me tell you, it’s hard out here for an orc. We experience tremendous insecurity, not knowing whether we’ll have a job, or be able to raid peaceful villages, or if our friends will eat us. Sauron appeals to us economically challenged goblins because he offers us the chance of a decent wage, respect for our values, and renewed pride in being the corrupted spawn of Morgoth.
If the Free People are going to defeat Sauron, you need to let go of your elitist attitudes and choose someone who can appeal to the moderate orc vote. That’s why I support Saruman the White to lead the Council of the Wise.
Now, I know there are a lot of orcs who won’t vote for any wizard. I get that. They’re blindly loyal to the Dark Lord, and nothing anyone does or says can change that. But those orcs represent no more than 10% of the Middle-earth electorate.
Gandalf has gotten a lot of attention by making the One Ring the center of his campaign. We all can agree that the Ring is important, but shouldn’t we also address the kitchen-table issues that moderate orcs — swing orcs — care about?
Destroying the Ring sounds appealing, but it’s naïve and simplistic. Much of Mordor’s infrastructure was built with the Ring. The building of the Dark Tower of Barad-Dûr and the Black Gate of Udûn employed thousands of trolls, goblins, and Haradrim. What are they supposed to do if it’s suddenly dissolved in the fires of Orodruin? Gandalf’s plan makes no provision for relocating and retraining thousands of Sauron’s minions.
Besides, Gandalf’s plan for dealing with the Ring just won’t work. It’s too far to the left to gain support from mainstream dwarves, and would vastly increase Hobbit immigration. If the Ring has to be dropped into Mount Doom, why can’t we have our own, native-born Great Eagles do the job?
Saruman the White supports a more gradual approach to destroying the One Ring. Under Saruman, Mordor will be transitioned away from a Ring-based economy, without the loss of thousands of orc jobs that Gandalf’s plan would entail. Saruman will work with the Ring, not against it, to gradually phase out the Shadow, the Eye of Fire, and the Nazgûl, and replace them with more sustainable alternatives.
Of course, Saruman’s record isn’t perfect. He said at one time that Rings of Power were good for Elves. We know that’s an outdated attitude. But that was more than a thousand years ago, before the Witch-King of Angmar destroyed the Northern Realm. Things were different then.
Saruman has repudiated his previous support for building engines of fire and doom beneath the tower of Isengard and breeding the Uruk-hai in its pits. But what’s done is done. We can’t go back and fix the past. Many radical Ents still oppose him for his one-time policy of “cutting down all the trees.” Saruman has acknowledged that he was wrong and says his position on Ents has evolved. But let’s be realistic. Sometimes you have to build hellish devices and generate foul orc-spawn to get things done. That’s just how politics works.
Saruman has received endorsements from the savage tribes of Dunland, the Great Goblin, and the King of Rohan (according to Theoden’s loyal advisor and spokesman, Gríma Wormtongue). He’s the wizard who can lead us into a bright new age.
And to those who say it’s time we choose someone like Lady Galadriel, forget it. There are still a lot of people who will never vote for an elf.
I mean... the Electoral College has in practice almost always served to ratify the popular vote winner in presidential elections, with all the nation-injuring conflicts emerging when the Electoral College comes out of step with that popular vote.
So leaving aside the inevitable, but unpredictable, shifts in political tactics and voter behavior attendant to a new system, in principle it seems like removing the Electoral College would change little other than to negate our current system's catastrophic fail-states. When phrased as 'keep everything but the very worst elements', abolishing the EC sounds downright conservative.
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My confusion is merely on the point of how one could come to invent an Electoral College as a worthwhile avenue of reform or constitutional design given the weight of two centuries' evidence. Let it not be enough that basically every society on the planet other than our own has rejected it, that it was unpopular from its inception in this country, that it is unpopular to this day (the latest manifestation being the referendum result I mentioned above), that its only contemporary function is to entrench the White Wing minority that constitutes the fascist-Republican base (and while I doubt the white Evangelicals who constitute up to a full half of Republican voters would seriously persecute Catholics if given the opportunity, your life wouldn't be easier under their thumb). Let it not be enough that the Electoral College produced a George W. Bush and a Donald Trump within a generation (reminder: up to the 2000 election it was a widespread concern that Al Gore would win the EC but lose the popular vote, which is OK if it's a Republican apparently).
But this fact alone should forever consign electoral colleges to the concrete sarcophagus of history: Both the 2016 and 2020 elections produced (ignoring faithless electors) the same 306-232 margins. In 2016, the EC winner lost by 3 million votes. In 2020, the EC winner won by up to 7 million votes. Exact same Electoral College result, popular vote difference of over 9 million.
How could such outcomes ever be justified in theory?
All in all a worse idea on paper than Indonesia's current controversial legislative push to introduce alcohol prohibition.
Perhaps you will be pleased to consider that the Trump era has dealt our unitary union a lasting blow. Radically-decentralized electoral administration was proven to be resistant to despotism (unlike that in so many unitary states with publics no more degraded than our own). The absence of the central state during the pandemic left a vacuum that was filled by cities and states variously coordinating with each other or levying regulations and restrictions against one another's residents, albeit low-grade and unenforceable for the most part. Besides such accomplished events, one doesn't need to be a savvy political analyst to realize that the extension of polarization into the loyalties of common citizens as well as the basic administrative functions of the civil service presages a new period of nullification starting this decade. As in the first such period, nullification will not be grounded in legalisms or residual sovereignties but in will to power, popular appetites, and the tolerance levels of partisan elites for the edicts of hostile/inimical authorities.Direct election of the President and Vice President would make only a modest difference now. The States are already something of a moribund concept in the eyes of many (most?). Taking away this element of State power -- however little exercised -- is only another step in the seemingly inevitable process of dismantling the republic we have in favor of a full democracy (for good and for ill).
Seems like every other country goes through constitutions generation-by-generation. A Constitution is just a document. If a nation should have some sacred civic values and virtues, they should be external to a constitution, which would merely embody them.
In America there are indeed many people who, contrary to the original intent, honestly believe that "you can't change the Constitution." As with the flag, they have been miseducated into glorifying the paper/fabric over the ideals. A Pledge of Allegiance is only a sinister simulacrum of a civic spirit.
Our record for stability is explained by the near-limitless Lebensraum we have enjoyed, our freedom from external enemies, and our willingness to internalize and sublimate instability against marginalized populations. These exorbitant luxuries are no longer a valued inheritance...
Idaho's right, holding elections with a peaceful transfer of power is not sufficient toward democracy as, indeed, there is every possibility of those things being present in an oligarchy where only dozens can vote. There is a sliding scale, of course, from more autocratic/oligarchic to more democratic, but the early republic was not in a meaningful sense more of a democracy than the Roman republic or contemporary China. Calling that a democracy makes about as much sense as calling FDR's government a dictatorship (for its tinge of centralized power).
But there is, inevitably, a cut-off point. Without a decision to categorize, we can't have a concept of non-democracy, and then we're really in the semantic wilderness.
Another way to look at it is, where would the early US (or Georgian UK) fall along contemporary rankings of states? 2/8 points maybe? 3 points?
What you're describing sounds more like a deficit in the political behavior of citizens than in the character of the "establishment" itself.
Your grievances with particular emanations of policy have to be distinguished from the desirability or applicability of democracy as a system (and Brexit would hardly be less damaging or insistent under a Tory oligarchy), let alone the semantics of democracy as a concept. We always have to be clear about what it is we're talking about.
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