Like I said in the other threads, politics isn't about taking ideological stands and fighting battles you can't win. It's about looking at what works, and what you can get, and getting it done. One inch at a time.
Which is why politics is so deplorable, corrupt and ineffective.[/QUOTE]
And the alternatives are better? Are we to wait for a truly benevolent despot or oligarchy to step forward to lead us? Perhaps that's why so many people are waiting for the End of Days: They want some kind of Messianic figure to take undisputed power so they no longer have to think for themselves.[/QUOTE]
The proper alternative is to reduce political influence to a minimum by adhering to the concept of the citizen-legislator as intended by the founders. The government was supposed to be part-time, and the legislators would then GO HOME to their real jobs and lives in their respective communities. The idea that someone could actually make their living in politics full-time was abhorrent. Of course, now we've gotten away from that. It's taken a few hundred years, but we've gotten to that point where we've managed to proverbially replace the 1 tyrant 1000 miles away with 1000 tyrants 1 mile away. When Thomas Jefferson said "The tree of liberty must be periodically refreshed with the blood of patriots and tyrants," he wasn't just coming up with a cool quote for Ed Harris in The Rock... he meant that it was inevitable that those who wish to hold power will eventually find a way to keep it to themselves, and that the destruction and "reset button" of the system were the only way to return to liberty. We're already past the point of no return. Our government has turned completely to tyranny, of both thought and deed, hiding behind a fractured veneer of false democracy through false dichotomy. Now it's just a waiting game until the piper's bill comes due and institutions we previously thought indefatigable start crashing down around our ears.
[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]"America is at that awkward stage. It's too late to work within the system, but too early to shoot the bastards."[/FONT][FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]- Claire Wolfe[/FONT]
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I'm confused. Are you saying we have less freedom now than we did before? As far as I can tell we have more freedom than at any other time in American history. And by we I mean all of us: men, women, all races, kids, etc.. Edit: But I think we have had this argument before. I favor social freedoms first and you favor economic freedoms first, so to you the existence of taxes as they are is far more abhorrent than the freedoms given to gays and women and blacks is good.
That aside, I think you are making the same mistake that the Objectivist movement does when it focuses on the hyper-capitalism of Rands work and not the sanctity of the ego. In both cases you are talking about an anachronistic ideal that simply could not exist in the real world, as their sources developed them many many years ago.
Take for instance the defense of property rights, something you and she both would argue as being neccessary. Beyond the simple concepts of real estate it would also delve into IP and technology law. It wouldn't be that hard to argue that environmentalism would fall into the same category as it is impossible to isolate air or water, therefore your pollution damages my property. Then you would have divorce in there too of course. Oh yeah, for that matter you may even have to deal with gay rights legislation due to issues of long term partnerships and deaths without a will, should it go to the family of the deceased or to his partner? And of course the RIAA would want some legislation as well right?
All of that is just property rights (and just a tiny little slice of it.) The reality of government is that it HAS to be complicated. Do I agree with everything it does? Hell no. I think there should be mandatory term limits in congress. I think political families are disgusting. I think more time needs to be spent cleaning up old laws and closing loopholes and retaining the intentions. But the government you have described works nowhere other than on paper, and not even much paper.