| ▲ | atoav 3 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
Yes and no. Because you can always go one level higher and ask: Why are the US people the cause? And then we will talk about structural issues, to do with social mobility, education, a dysfunctional journalistic landscape, a tribalization of the political landscape and so on. But of course it doesn't stop there. You can go one up: Why did these underlying causes came to be? The simple answer is that a certain loose conglomerate of polticians, billionaires and CEOs thought it would profit them (it did). You can pick one of the issues mentioned above and go deep on why it is in the bad shape it is today and the answer will always boil down to lobbying and money in politics. This are the much more insightful reasons and you get there just by asking "but why?" two times like a yound child. Totally recommended. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | ViewTrick1002 2 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> will always boil down to lobbying and money in politics. And here you take the easy way out. Just blame third parties. You should keep asking why to find the real cause. My personal take, as someone who is European but has lived in the US, Texas metro areas specifically, is that first past the post elections sow division. Choices are limited, political activity is neutered, and extremism builds until it finds an outlet through either of the two possible political choices. Taking over that side entirely. Political systems needs vents for frustration, and the US system does not have that. Which finally leads to the people. The only ones that could cause change needed to reform their representation in the political system is the people. | |||||||||||||||||
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