mikwut wrote:
Seriously, I am not just being contrarian. As good of a writer as you are it is often times missed. You are so naïve.
One of the thing that informs my reading of this smug condescension is that experts on democratic collapse along with a large number of public-facing political scientists consistently seem to believe the US is undergoing a democratic collapse. Opinions differ on what stage it is at and whether it can be reversed, but that's where the disagreement lies. Sure, those people are almost to a person liberals or conservatives who don't like Donald Trump because academics with expertise in political science in general are liberals or conservatives who don't like Donald Trump. Your "naïve" comment, as per usual, is aimed squarely at experts as it is when you go on defending global warming denialism or 9/11 trutherism. It doesn't carry any weight with me.
It isn't close to totalitarian states, where a backdrop far beyond just a leader seeking more power, is at play.
This comment is a cousin to when I described the Trump admin literally arguing for a de facto autocracy, which it was (and is) and you responded to it by complaining that that the US isn't currently an autocracy. The not-so-subtle shift was you changing arguments
for autocracy into claim of current autocracy. Here, I make the comment that corrupting elections to gain power to corrupt future elections mirrors totalitarian states and you complain that this is unfair because totalitarianism is more than a "leader seeking power." The specific feature I made a comparison to is corrupt elections to perpetuate the the ability to run future corrupt elections to maintain a lock on power.
Do you think Schiff has just pure motives or do you think he is thinking a Senate seat, a later run for president. Hint. it is the latter.
It doesn't matter if he's thinking about the time Donald Trump called him a pencil-neck. What matters is that he's correct.
Their thoughts are about power.
Cool. I think there are legitimate and illegitimate means to acquire political power. If you don't, then you have abhorrent views. If you do, then you probably need to get off this strawman.
both sides
Yeah. That's about all you offer. "naïve" indeed.
The ballot box should always win over a partisan vote in either the House or the Senate.
Speaking of naïve, I refuse to believe you are so naïve as to not understand how illicit manipulation of an election prevents the ability to have a legitimate decision occur through an election.