subgenius wrote:Every week the world is ending because of some new reason that is because of Trump.
Are there any adults posting on this board ?
Your friend Putin just called.
subgenius wrote:Every week the world is ending because of some new reason that is because of Trump.
Are there any adults posting on this board ?
EAllusion wrote:Expecting the public to magically transform into solid critical thinkers isn't going to save anything. That's not a realistic solution to any kind of problem. Alternatively, may I suggest a push to increase civics education in public schooling? Inculcating democratic values seems more realistic than trying to get people to be better critical thinkers.
Since the most tribalistic, politically backwards subset of our population is also the oldest, the best ray of hope I can offer is that maybe they'll die off before they do too much more damage. I wouldn't hold my breath on that either, though.
EAllusion wrote:Most of what is happening in North Carolina is legal, though, so I'm not sure how the courts would block it unless process was violating in passing the changes. The problem is that this sort of extreme partisanship breaks down democratic representation and our constitutional system(s) isn't cleverly written enough to prevent it. It's as though a modern variant of the Jim Crow south has become a nationalized party.
The one thing that strikes me as an equal protection issue in North Carolina, which not coincidentally is also the most dastardly action, is creating election boards have equal numbers of Republicans and Democrats, but allowing Republicans to control the board in even years and Democrats in odd years. That, of course, means they've made the law such that Republicans always control election boards in the years of any significant election. If that's not a Constitutional issue, then that's a major blindspot.
EAllusion wrote:Expecting the public to magically transform into solid critical thinkers isn't going to save anything. That's not a realistic solution to any kind of problem. Alternatively, may I suggest a push to increase civics education in public schooling? Inculcating democratic values seems more realistic than trying to get people to be better critical thinkers.
Since the most tribalistic, politically backwards subset of our population is also the oldest, the best ray of hope I can offer is that maybe they'll die off before they do too much more damage. I wouldn't hold my breath on that either, though.
honorentheos wrote:Our tribalism is inherently biological and we expand our circles to defend against threats from the other. It's not positive that some in the US may be more willing to include Putin in order to exclude political opponents in the US.
But to engage using the same paradigm is a recipe for failure. Regardless of what others think or the media tells us, we Americans have more in common, more to gain, and far more at stake collectively that demands we embrace one another. If that needs to be demonstrated by one side before it can be by the other, so be it. Let us begin with us.
beastie wrote:I’m not talking about surviving a Trump presidency, which, of course, has threats specific to that in particular. I’m talking about surviving the disease of which Trump is lately the most visible and frightening symptom.
To me, simplistically, the disease boils down to two main elements:
1. Radical tribalization as a reaction to globalization
2. Erosion of trust
/snip/