Kingu Kurimuzon
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 27, 2013
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Remember when these people at least pretended to be principled?
Both parties are morally bankrupt.
In an ideal world, we would alternate Left and Right presidents where the ones on the Left would introduce a bunch of new social programs to help marginalized groups, then the Right would take office and eliminate the programs that are not financially sound, then the Left would come back in and introduce more, then the Right would edit out the inefficient ones, etc. With that ebb and flow, a society could conceivably have effective and cost efficient social programs with a balanced, healthy, growing society that also has compassion for the most vulnerable individuals. Ideally the Left would create and the Right would edit.
No. Although I'm mostly just placing a positive dynamic on what happens to exist.For you ideal world is the system with just two parties ?
For you ideal world is the system with just two parties ?
In the real political world, we find power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. So we limit power by pitting one power against another power. Such as the Labor Party against the Liberal Party, or the Executive against the Judiciary.
The Separation of Powers limits power at the price of discontent.
By contrast idealism seeks to maximise power at the price of corruption.
That wasn't the point, the point was "why just two?".
Because when those two start to do deals beneath the table you basically get a subtle dictatorship. Therefore democracy is generally much more stable if you have more political poles. Especially since you get better representation in the terms of values.
(just to be clear)
I think that power removes boundaries and absolute power removes all boundaries and so it allows a person to express fully who they are because they are no longer restrained by social consequences and punishments. I don't think power corrupts, but instead it reveals.In the real political world, we find power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. So we limit power by pitting one power against another power. Such as the Labor Party against the Liberal Party, or the Executive against the Judiciary.
The Separation of Powers limits power at the price of discontent.
By contrast idealism seeks to maximise power at the price of corruption.
Yeah, pluralism is absolutely the best idea and democracy will falter without it.
As will any of the other pre-requisites to democracy themselves. Pluralism and diversity is just great.
There's really nothing that can be said of Republicans that can't be said of Democrats; nothing you can say about some people that you can't say about other people.
There is this interesting commonality between both the left and the right where they feel like the moral voices of reason and logic, and if only they could bring reason and logic to the deplorables and the baby killers, then like magic the stars and humanity would align. However, the irreconcilable values on both sides are both rooted in logic and reasoning, so neither can be an objective remedy to serve one side or the other.
I'd argue that it's more people being gamed for the benefit of the ruling class. Really "mainstream" politics is between people who think the 60s fixed everything and people who wish the 60s didn't happen; it has nothing to do with actually addressing the problems we face today, and that suits the people who benefit from the status quo just fine.
I've heard the meaning of life is to pay off debt that the political elites create.