▲ | komali2 3 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> when you just accept that as a fact, you are endorsing it I strongly disagree. > No I don't think that such a judicial system is normal. I believe we have enough evidence now to indicate that it is in fact normal. Americans believe their constitution is written about this - aggregation of power inevitably leading to tyranny, thus such aggregations must be prevented. The contradiction is believing a bureaucratized aggregation of power (the United States government or individual state governments) would function as an effective regulation. We have 250 years of evidence now that it does not. 250 years, and a significant portion of the time a large portion of the population was enslaved. Half the time, more than half the population couldn't even vote. In living memory, portions of the population were marched into concentration camps. Actually, that's happening again. 250 years and the largest per capita prison population. The experiment was successful - now we know these systems don't work. Time to trust the American instinct's true origins, in an enlightenment triggered by Western confrontation with indigenous American ideology, best described as "anarchism." Most values Americans falsely believe their institutions are upholding can be traced back to this root of American history, when colonists were intermingling with indigenous Americans. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | 1718627440 2 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
>> you are endorsing it > I strongly disagree. > [proceeds to claim this is moral and just] > aggregation of power inevitably leading to tyranny, thus such aggregations must be prevented Yeah true, aggregation of power makes that easier, bureaucracy makes it still possible, in fact large bureaucracy makes it easier to oppress people by a majority who doesn't want oppression, because everyone is "just doing it's job". That's how Nazi Germany operated. > We have 250 years of evidence So you had 250 years to address this and are still complaining? /s > In living memory, portions of the population were marched into concentration camps. Why doesn't this lead to a social stigma against it and strong opposition against it? As an outsider it seams more like a large majority doesn't have this in memory at all. Does the whole society has stockholm syndrome? > The experiment was successful - now we know these systems don't work. Now you know YOUR system doesn't work. The same you already knew when you rejected the idea that your state is just (Did you?). In fact the United States of America are not the only existing society. > Americans falsely believe their institutions are upholding So you think:
What are you arguing for? Your whole country has some cognitive dissonance (from an outsider view). But it fits that a majority seams to claim they are and want to be apolitical, yet isn't happy with the current state or actively distrust it. Or is the intersection of these circles empty? | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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