from Segnosaur:
I'll support it if you make me president.
Right, your name's got a circle round it. Let me have men around who are unambitious. Power should never be given to those who desire it. That's why I'm taking on the major burden myself. No: make that the supreme burden.
from Shane Costello:
You might find that the common people of said sovereign nations have something to say on the matter too.
The opinion of the common people is a reflection of the culture created by the uncommon people (Murdoch's Law.) If there are good arguments against nationalism they are good whatever the opinion of the common people. Facts on the ground are created by movers and shakers, not the common people. In short, screw the opinion of the common people. We'll design that at the same time as we design the new model.
Examples? [of environmental problems]
Global warming is the most obvious. The US will pursue policies that serve what it perceives as its national interests, if the US government is to be believed (in this case I think it can be), and the interests of the Texan on the Rio Grande will be the same interests as the Alaskan's (implied). And bollocks to the world.
(Here I've referred to the US as if it's a nation, and it does have this blurry superposition of nation/post-nation about it. The Civil War is right there on top, but the Constitution comes through in the weave. Perhaps South Carolina's imminent secession will collapse the wave function.)
I know, how long are we waiting for the first draft of the human genome? Oh, hang on a minute..........
There are other scientific projects. The fact that one didn't get impeded hardly implies that others aren't. Please try to be substantive in your posts, I've got a lot on my plate here.
I've a feeling that national borders are irrelevant. Barriers to trade, investment and employment are the problem.
Different laws apply across the border, different tax systems, different utility suppliers, there are tariffs, immigration controls (the nation is for its nationals, after all - but the US national experience looks post-national from that angle), delays and discontinuities of all sorts. In the post-national world there will be free trade and free movement just as there is within nations now.
Don't assume that does of us who feel patriotic about our respective countries engage in irrational and destructive behaviour as a result.
But patriotism is irrational in itself. It doesn't have to be destructive to be irrational - look at Buddhism. (Yeah, I know, Korean monks have been killing other monks over control of the Temple funds, but that's an exception.) You were born somewhere - so what? I was born in Wales, it's a great place, I've seen other great places. I'm back here by chance, not nostalgia or patriotism (although its nice to watch rugby in a pub where England supporters are in the minority). I have no pride in an accident of birth. I can't claim credit for anything another Welshman might have done in the past. Their triumphs and tribulations were there own; I'm interested in them, but no more than in other people's stories. That, to me, is rational.
And Islam? I've noticed people doing very strange things lately in the name of Islam.
I will happily consign religion to the dustbin of history as well.
Probably the last thing we need is a "new political model", considering the harm wrought by "new political models" like fascism and communism.
For some reason I'm put in mind of the Simpsons episode when the comet that's going to hit Springfield boils away. At the end Moe gathers a mob and says "Now let's burn down the observatory so this never happens again". We can see what the current national model is doing for the world right now. To pluck one out of the air: the nation of Congo (Democratic Republic Of), which is about 1500km wide and bears no relation to anything but the marching range of a bunch of Belgians, is in a bit of a state. People are suffering and dying - but the sanctity of the Congo as a nation, all of 50 years antiquity, is the primary concern of the political world. There's got to be an alternative.
Would I be right in saying that in theory, so was the soviet block?
The USSR was a similar experiment, the Soviet Bloc was more of an empire.
What would happen in the event of their being a conflict between the local and the central as to what makes sense, what is rational, or to the exact demarcation of rights between the two entities?
What happens when this kind of conflict occurs in the US? Only one Civil War in over two centuries, that's a good record. Europe isn't in the same league. The US experience has to have a lot to teach us - after all, that's what an experiment is for.