▲ | mulmen 3 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
I refuse the conclusion because the alternative is hopeless. Random destruction might be the best kind of destruction but that doesn’t mean destruction leads to efficiency. If politicians are inevitable why would what comes next be any less susceptible to political manipulation than what we already built? What’s step two in the revolutionary underpants gnome playbook? 1) Burn it all down 2) ??? 3) profit? > Perhaps the tree of efficiency needs to be watered with the blood of career bureaucrats. I assume this is a bad joke because otherwise it’s extremely dangerous and ignorant. In the current climate it translates to an actual call to violence. Jefferson’s quote is about the necessity of violent revolution which ultimately led to the systems we have today. He had a specific grievance. He desired self-determination. He won. We have it. Why are you so eager to repeat the sacrifice and hard work of our ancestors to get back to where we already are? What benefit do you see in doing so? Career bureaucrats aren’t politicians. Those are different things. I have had many positive experiences with “career bureaucrats”. They really only exist to help. It’s why we call them public servants. It is a lot easier to call my public utility provider and solve a problem than it is to call Facebook, Disney, or Alaska Airlines. I have had nothing but positive experiences with the IRS. It’s easy to break things. Children can do it. What’s your plan for building and operating something if you can’t even operate what we already have? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | ACCount37 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Destruction is a big part of why capitalism works. If a company becomes obsolete or grows too inefficient, it dies, and its dysfunction dies with it. The destruction isn't the goal there - it's the price. The price you pay for maintaining efficiency. Government agencies rarely face anything like this. TSA exists without facing a risk of being destroyed for being worthless. There is a mechanism missing. The "step two" is to rebuild it from the grounds up. If there is any need in rebuilding it at all. Never rehire any of the old people. It's how a lot of the post-Soviet countries ended up fixing their dysfunctional government institutions. They had to thoroughly destroy what was there and build it anew to as much as make them sort of work. There are reasons to believe that the dysfunction would have survived lesser measures - and in some countries that shied away from destruction, it did. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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