rockaction
Footballguy
Something I've been thinking about for a while now.
It seems that with all the contentiousness about a myriad of issues both social and economic, it would behoove the US of A to split into four parties. The breakdown of the parties seems obvious to me. I would divide them into the following groups: Trump Republicans could be the working class, unwoke, anti-immigrant, isolationist foreign policy folk that are given to watching Fox News and OAN. Classical Liberals would be the laissez-faire economic types who are slightly hawkish on foreign policy, yet more liberal on social issues while still not willing to cede that much in the way of social issues. Democrats could be the party of Biden and infrastructure, neoliberal on many issues while also preaching a restrained military reach. Progressives are the last party, but the only way in which I can think of describing them is in pure epithet form, so I won't bother. You know who you are and what you stand for.
It seems to me like political energies would be better spent forming real coalitions with real legislation at stake rather than two incoherent parties that exist only to frustrate each other. This way, accurate and proportional representation of the electorate in regard to the issues would be more likely to be the case, as no longer would you have silent senators or congressmen afraid of alienating their constituency for the sake of their party and vice-versa. It would localize politics much more, leading to instances where you'd likely have a much more accurate pipeline of people to their representatives. You'd also harness the majoritarian feature of our system by harnessing the energies of politics, making it so that strange bedfellows could indeed be that for a piece of legislation, rather than having to adhere to the incoherent ideologies that now spark the parties' energies.
Seems like so much gridlock is a function of these competing intra-party principles rather than impulses towards the will of the majority of people. Just a thought. What say you?
It seems that with all the contentiousness about a myriad of issues both social and economic, it would behoove the US of A to split into four parties. The breakdown of the parties seems obvious to me. I would divide them into the following groups: Trump Republicans could be the working class, unwoke, anti-immigrant, isolationist foreign policy folk that are given to watching Fox News and OAN. Classical Liberals would be the laissez-faire economic types who are slightly hawkish on foreign policy, yet more liberal on social issues while still not willing to cede that much in the way of social issues. Democrats could be the party of Biden and infrastructure, neoliberal on many issues while also preaching a restrained military reach. Progressives are the last party, but the only way in which I can think of describing them is in pure epithet form, so I won't bother. You know who you are and what you stand for.
It seems to me like political energies would be better spent forming real coalitions with real legislation at stake rather than two incoherent parties that exist only to frustrate each other. This way, accurate and proportional representation of the electorate in regard to the issues would be more likely to be the case, as no longer would you have silent senators or congressmen afraid of alienating their constituency for the sake of their party and vice-versa. It would localize politics much more, leading to instances where you'd likely have a much more accurate pipeline of people to their representatives. You'd also harness the majoritarian feature of our system by harnessing the energies of politics, making it so that strange bedfellows could indeed be that for a piece of legislation, rather than having to adhere to the incoherent ideologies that now spark the parties' energies.
Seems like so much gridlock is a function of these competing intra-party principles rather than impulses towards the will of the majority of people. Just a thought. What say you?
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