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Is this really something we have to Columbo?

He wanted to stay in power more than he wanted to be a decent human being who followed the rule of law or... like basic logic or human decency, feed (and feeding in a perfect feedback loop) by a growing dangerous percentage of the population more and more enamored with dangerous conspiracy theories.
Eye think you’ve got it.
 
If this was something that reduced down to a single fact, or even single facts, that we could talk about in isolation... I'd be up for it. It isn't. Behind any claim of this sort worth discussing are so many others that we aren't going to agree on that there is no point. Our frames for holding and understanding the conversation are too different.

I used to be a normie leftie. I couldn't understand why some people were so keen on guns and the 2nd amendment. It bothered me that I couldn't get them.... so I spent time with them. It took a long while. My feeling now is that the view of the right from the left is about as reliable as one of those medieval maps that showed the location of the kingdom of Prester John and the land where people's heads are in their chests.

Just so funny.

Well having gone to many, many "Right wing" forum's websites, listened to Carlson etc., I would say that the "Rights" view of the "Left" is has you say about "as reliable as one of those medieval maps that showed the location of the kingdom of Prester John and the land where people's heads are in their chests."

After all it is now mainstream "Right" opinion that the 2020 election was stolen by evil Leftists and of course the funniest "Rightest" notion is the idea that the Democrats are radical Leftists. Whatever.

Of course it is a fact that some Republicans have been promoting rabid conspiracy nonsense. (Certainly the Jan. 6th mob was full of it.) Along with the stolen election conspiracy. I could also mention the Southern strategy nonsense.

If you want to say both sides Left and Right are about equally delusional about the other that is an argument but has it stands your comment is risible. (Although the argument that centrists like the Democrats are "Left" is funny.)
 
Proving it is a deep bucket. I know it's a very obvious reference, but Orwell does go on about it quite a lot in the second half of The Road to Wigan Pier. Mostly I'm thinking of reading I've been doing about the New Left and the beginning of Social Studies in the UK. That's the period where they are dealing with the realisation that maybe Stalin wasn't that great and absorbing Gramsci and with him the idea that the Marxist revolution wasn't going to happen because capitalism was making the working class too content.

Look at what happened to Enoch Powell, love him or loathe him... he had a huge amount of working class support in England. That working class opinion was absolutely not acceptable to the sorts of people who decide what is up for debate, and what isn't. Labour has always looked on the actual working class like Gordon Brown faced with the "bigoted old woman".

The Labour Party didn't represent working people. The Labour Party represented a particular progressive, managerial vision of the future that for a while centred on the working class. Where there was conflict between that vision and the actual desires of the actual working class, they chose their progressive vision. The gap got wider and wider as Labour moved on to other groups to occupy the place in their progressive vision that the working class had once occupied. Labour no more represent the social views of the, often socially conservative, immigrant communities they have adopted than they once represented the working class.

I've always found Orwell to be a paradox. He could at times be so brilliant and then so blinkered. Much of what he wrote about then contemporary culture has always struck me has hysterical pearl clutching. A lot of it is pretty funny along with being a great deal of no-nothing philistinism. Orwell's analysis of Stalinism and the elitists pretensions of so many Leftists were on point. But then a lot of modern writers and commentators sort of miss his comments on right wing political movements and conservatism which he did not like very much either.

But then British Labour has, for a long time abandoned the Working Class in favour of a managerial state and supporting Capitalism. Giving the Working Class any sort of say in the management of the modes of production was dumped long ago. If anything the current Labour party supports the Capitalist economic system and has for quite sometime. Very much like the Conservatives in Britain. The chief difference being a willingness to throw in some scraps to other people not part of the economic elite.

I suppose that could be deemed better than Conservative policies that serve the economic elite more than other groups.

And of course like in the USA a lot of contemporary Conservative politics in Britain consist of pearl clutching.
 
You are right. The Democrat platform today is just the same as the Republican platform in the 1860s. How could I have failed to see it?

A sarcastic response is not a good, or any, counter argument. I suggest you read this and maybe learn something:

When and (to an extent) why did the parties switch places?[
By Eric Rauchway
MAY 20, 2010
Students Frequently Ask this Question: when did the major US parties switch places, and why? Which is to say, when and why did the Democrats, who had been the party of limited federal government, begin to favor expanding Washington’s power? When and why did the Republicans, who had favored so strong a central government in Washington that they would accept a civil war rather than see its power curbed, become the party rhetorically committed to curbing its power?When is easier to answer than why, though there’s no single date. (It would be nicer, though, if in one presidential election, say, the two candidates had done a partial do-si-do and ended up in each other’s places.) But we can pretty easily bracket the era of change.

Eric Rauchway: Ph.D., History, Stanford University, 1996
M.A., History, Stanford University, 1993
B.A., Cum Laude in History and with Distinction in All Subjects, Cornell University, 1991
M.A., History, University of Oxford (by special resolution of congregation), 1998
 
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Well having gone to many, many "Right wing" forum's websites, listened to Carlson etc., I would say that the "Rights" view of the "Left" is has you say about "as reliable as one of those medieval maps that showed the location of the kingdom of Prester John and the land where people's heads are in their chests."
It probably depends a lot on what one means by left and right. On the right, you'd pretty much have to stop watching movies to avoid being exposed to a Democrat worldview. What would you say serves the same function to make the worldview of the right almost unavoidable to the left? My impression is the exposure is much less.

After all it is now mainstream "Right" opinion that the 2020 election was stolen by evil Leftists and of course the funniest "Rightest" notion is the idea that the Democrats are radical Leftists. Whatever.
This doesn't seem correct to me. The right don't blame the average Democrat voter for 2020. They blame the GOP establishment and the Democrat party machine. I can't think of any claimed conspiracy that blames the average leftie. They still think they are misguided fools same as they've always done. Meanwhile, my Democrat friends spent the past few years saying that anybody who supported Trump was clearly a racist. This isn't a negative opinion of "the left", this is a negative opinion of political machines.

To speak to the second part of it, I think one has to unpack what one means by radical leftist. I would say that your average Democrat is not a radical, however they have absorbed a bunch of ideas like "equity" that have radical implications.

Of course it is a fact that some Republicans have been promoting rabid conspiracy nonsense. (Certainly the Jan. 6th mob was full of it.) Along with the stolen election conspiracy. I could also mention the Southern strategy nonsense.
There is no point discussing what was and wasn't a conspiracy. We could start arguing now and not be finished by 2024. It's not even a very interesting question.

If you want to say both sides Left and Right are about equally delusional about the other that is an argument but has it stands your comment is risible. (Although the argument that centrists like the Democrats are "Left" is funny.)
I didn't realise you had the True definition of Left and Right. ;-) They can mean a bunch of different things. I would generally say that Left means the side that is in some sense the inheritors of the Jacobin/Whig view of social progress. It's the side that believes in the perfectibility of man. It's the side that favours youthful idealism and reason over mature pessimism and experience.

The Right is simply what ever opposes the Left, the forces of reaction. It isn't really a clearly defined thing in the same sense.

Your average Democrat is certainly not at the vanguard of the revolution, but I think they are on the side of this spirit of social "progress" rather than opposed to it. Often they will want chunks of the revolution to stop at the point it was at when their worldview was fixed as a young adult, but that has always been the case.

I'm genuinely curious to know what definition of Left and Right you are operating with.
 
This to me seems like the key point that links the 1860s to today. There are two incompatible visions of the country that can't be unified or met halfway. As in the 1860s, the Federal government is going to interpret the Constitution and the law to protect the power of the Federal government.

My expectation is that the process of centralising power within the Federal government and associated oligarchic corporate interests will continue for the foreseeable future. That will continue to build pressure within the US just as it is in Europe. Possibly that can all be ridden out and, with enough immigration, made irrelevant.

In my post I mentioned that the origin of the doctrine of unilateral succession at a whim originated not in any real conflict of principles of state vers Federal power but over the need to protect slavery. Before the Civil War it was a common belief and practice in the South to have absolutely NO problem with the extension of Federal power to extend / protect slavery. Thus in the South state after state had no problem with violations of "states rights" by the Federal government that extended / protected slavery. They had no trouble with the Federal government imposing slavery in a territory, (Complete with Slave Code.), they had no trouble with Territorial governments not allowed to ban or regulate slavery in anyway. And of course they saw it has a violation of "states rights" that if they could not take a slave into a territory thus demanding extraterritoriality for their laws.

After the Civil War the so-called "Lost Causers" erected a lying myth about the Civil War really being caused by a conflict between local autonomy and a potentially tyrannical Federal government. This is of course a lie. Of course counties within a state had no right to secede from the state. That type of local autonomy, could be and was crushed by the state.

The revolt was caused by the desire to keep a system of totalitarian like authority / control over c. 4 million human beings because those 4 million human being represented a vast source of wealth. In other words a revolt to support a system of tyranny.

After the Civil War "states rights" was trotted out to justify another tyrannical system of authority, jim crow, segregation. Before the Civil War and after Many Southerners had absolutely no problems supporting theses tyrannies but resented deeply, has tyranny, any effort to remove, or moderate these tyrannies. The ironies are hilarious in a sick way.

Before the Civil War many Southerners regarded with favour Supreme Court decisions that extended slavery, minimized protections for American Blacks etc. Thus for example Southern States routinely violate the rights of Black American Citizens.

The tyrannical power of State governments to screw over people was to be enhanced and any interference to lesson that tyrannical authority was of course tyranny?! Whatever.

By the eve of the Civil War it was routine in the South to denounce has a violation of "states rights" Northern state laws that absolutely forbade slavery, and in fact even the Northern state laws that in the past had there abolished slavery were denounced has violations of "states rights". Many Southerners were looking forward to a Supreme court decision that would strike down Northern laws that forbade the transit of slaves through the territory of states; a violation of "states rights" and an assertion of Federal authority.

The whole right of succession issue was little more than a paper thin rational for the real cause - the defence of slavery.
 
It probably depends a lot on what one means by left and right. On the right, you'd pretty much have to stop watching movies to avoid being exposed to a Democrat worldview. What would you say serves the same function to make the worldview of the right almost unavoidable to the left? My impression is the exposure is much less.

Hilarious, just hilarious. Aside from the risible crap, a staple of Right Wing media that Movies are "Democrat Worldview". I could mention Fox News, and the dominance of the Right Wing on talk radio, podcasts etc. I could also mention the Evangelical media network and its captive audience. Your "impression" is a joke.


This doesn't seem correct to me. The right don't blame the average Democrat voter for 2020. They blame the GOP establishment and the Democrat party machine. I can't think of any claimed conspiracy that blames the average leftie. They still think they are misguided fools same as they've always done. Meanwhile, my Democrat friends spent the past few years saying that anybody who supported Trump was clearly a racist. This isn't a negative opinion of "the left", this is a negative opinion of political machines.

Your straw manning. It is ubiquitous by the right to accuse the "left" of stealing the election. I never said anything about the "average leftie". I said that much of the American right accuses the "left" of stealing the election. Which is a paranoid conspiracy theory of bottomless idiocy. Why do so many believe this nonsense? Well because they are being massively lied too. Your desperate attempt to say it is about political machines not individual leftists is risible. It is soo so easy to go to various forum's to find foaming at the mouth hysteria about the left. (Go to Fox News, go to OAN etc.)

Your attempt to excuse this idiocy is pretty funny. As for Trump and racists. Well a lot of Trump supporters did in fact turn out to be racists. (Some of the kooks at Jan. 6 2021 bear that out.) Has for all being racists that is obviously stupid.

To speak to the second part of it, I think one has to unpack what one means by radical leftist. I would say that your average Democrat is not a radical, however they have absorbed a bunch of ideas like "equity" that have radical implications.

Since you have not bothered to define what you mean by Leftist or Rightist I feel no need to do the same. I should also point out all ideas have "radical implications" if taken in certain direction. After Conservatism can mean a Theocracy, etc.


There is no point discussing what was and wasn't a conspiracy. We could start arguing now and not be finished by 2024. It's not even a very interesting question.

Why? The fact that so many "Right" people are now prey to delusions like, Qanon, the stolen election, pizzagate etc., etc., isn't very "interesting"? Whatever.


I didn't realise you had the True definition of Left and Right. ;-) They can mean a bunch of different things. I would generally say that Left means the side that is in some sense the inheritors of the Jacobin/Whig view of social progress. It's the side that believes in the perfectibility of man. It's the side that favours youthful idealism and reason over mature pessimism and experience.

Your too funny. You have just regurgitated one of the most persistent delusions of political thinking ever. It is bluntly far more complicated than that. The implication that the "right" is 'mature" is hilarious. I suppose the stolen election crap is "mature" and so is Qanon. Whatever. I suppose the desire of so many in the USA for theocracy is "mature".

The Right is simply what ever opposes the Left, the forces of reaction. It isn't really a clearly defined thing in the same sense.

No reason to take this comment seriously at all.

Your average Democrat is certainly not at the vanguard of the revolution, but I think they are on the side of this spirit of social "progress" rather than opposed to it. Often they will want chunks of the revolution to stop at the point it was at when their worldview was fixed as a young adult, but that has always been the case.

I'm genuinely curious to know what definition of Left and Right you are operating with.

Not interested in playing anymore.
 
I've always found Orwell to be a paradox. He could at times be so brilliant and then so blinkered. Much of what he wrote about then contemporary culture has always struck me has hysterical pearl clutching. A lot of it is pretty funny along with being a great deal of no-nothing philistinism. Orwell's analysis of Stalinism and the elitists pretensions of so many Leftists were on point. But then a lot of modern writers and commentators sort of miss his comments on right wing political movements and conservatism which he did not like very much either.
Have you read his essay in response to Burnam's Managerial Revolution?

Anyway, I agree with you that he was suspicious of the right as well. My impression is that he was mainly against totalitarianism. I recall him saying in the buildup to the War that it looked like a choice between totalitarian Socialism and totalitarian Fascism and that while he thought both were bad choices, he favoured totalitarian Socialism.

But then British Labour has, for a long time abandoned the Working Class in favour of a managerial state and supporting Capitalism.
Certainly, but then the Left has been moving away from the class and economics based idea of the struggle since the end of WW2. In the UK you see it happening in the 60s as Gramsci and continental philosophy comes in. Obviously that didn't displace the trades unions overnight. The utopian vision has always needed sufficient power to be centralised that all can be made right. There is nothing incompatible in that with a managerial state and a corporate oligarchy, so long as you think you are going to control it. It's not as if capitalists run these big companies any more. A hundred years ago, Henry Ford owned Ford and made the decisions. Sure the family still holds a big stake, but not a majority. Instead you have Vanguard, Blackrock and a bunch of other similar companies. Everything is owned by big investment companies. Owners of the means of production are layers of corporate structure away from the things they own. They are absent landlords. Power is almost entirely in the hands of managers. All those managers espouse the diversity, equity and inclusion rhetoric and environmental, social, and corporate governance score targets that came out of this change in the left. The left are great at taking over bureaucracies.

Giving the Working Class any sort of say in the management of the modes of production was dumped long ago.
Certainly. That is something of an anachronism these days.

If anything the current Labour party supports the Capitalist economic system and has for quite sometime.
Does it? Is it the party of the small independent shopkeeper, or the person who wants to start a small business? I think rather it is the party of management. Whether that is managers in the state, or managers in multinational companies, or managers in NGOs is not much of a distinction. Have you seen Blair talk lately? The vision he sells is of a managed international world that has moved beyond politics and decisions that need to be made get made in partnerships between government, private companies and NGOs. Its a technocracy. The old leftist utopia of Marx where nobody has to work has become the utopia of Davos where you own nothing, live in a pod and get UBI while the world is taken care of by managers. That is where liberté, égalité, fraternité ultimately leads.

Very much like the Conservatives in Britain. The chief difference being a willingness to throw in some scraps to other people not part of the economic elite.
The Conservatives believe in very little, I think. I don't know when they last believed in anything. I guess Thatcher had a vision, but that was 12 years and isn't part of a century's long progression of a worldview. Leftwing thought in the UK goes back at least to the Whigs. At best the right slow things down for a bit before the left sets off again.

The mistake is seeing the left in Marxist terms of class struggle and workers cooperatives. That's just a particular form that it took towards the end of the 19th Century and early 20th Century.

I suppose that could be deemed better than Conservative policies that serve the economic elite more than other groups.
That's a very of the Left perspective. The view on the right would be that welfare feels good and virtuous, but creates a permanent underclass. Like ending grammar schools, it felt virtuous, but it's strange how so many more working class kids seemed to make it into the first rank of society before they were closed, and how few after. If I had a general criticism of the left, it would be that they tend to be far more interested in whether something makes them feel moral than what the outcome is.

And of course like in the USA a lot of contemporary Conservative politics in Britain consist of pearl clutching.
Personally, I think Conservative party politics is mostly a charade by people who mostly believe very little. Still, people who believe in nothing can often be preferable to people believe strongly in something.
 
Hilarious, just hilarious. Aside from the risible crap, a staple of Right Wing media that Movies are "Democrat Worldview". I could mention Fox News, and the dominance of the Right Wing on talk radio, podcasts etc. I could also mention the Evangelical media network and its captive audience. Your "impression" is a joke.
I didn't think the left watched a lot of Fox News or listened to Evangelical radio, except maybe if Colbert finds something to ridicule. I think maybe you misunderstood what I said. The right can't avoid the left unless they live in a cave. Hollywood is left wing, at least in so far as it presents itself, to give one very obvious example of something that is difficult to avoid. What would the the equivalent right wing media that some college dropout working in a feminist bookstore in Portland would struggle to avoid?

Your straw manning. It is ubiquitous by the right to accuse the "left" of stealing the election. I never said anything about the "average leftie". I said that much of the American right accuses the "left" of stealing the election.
What is "the left"? They are presumably not accusing a concept, or a Platonic ideal of doing this. They are talking about people. Which people? That would be mostly the Democrat political machine. Are we going to play word games here?

Which is a paranoid conspiracy theory of bottomless idiocy. Why do so many believe this nonsense? Well because they are being massively lied too. Your desperate attempt to say it is about political machines not individual leftists is risible. It is soo so easy to go to various forum's to find foaming at the mouth hysteria about the left. (Go to Fox News, go to OAN etc.)
Again, what do you think they mean? That a concept stole the election? That a Platonic ideal stole the election? What are they actually claiming?

Your attempt to excuse this idiocy is pretty funny. As for Trump and racists. Well a lot of Trump supporters did in fact turn out to be racists. (Some of the kooks at Jan. 6 2021 bear that out.) Has for all being racists that is obviously stupid.
I'm glad you don't seem to be saying all. To me it seems very common to argue that since Trump is obviously racist with racist policies, then anybody who supports him is knowingly supporting a racist with racist policies, and hence is almost certainly a racist. You still paint the right with a wider brush than the right paints the left. Again, if we ignore sophistry and claiming that they said "the left stole the election" and look at the actual claims.... it's the Democrat party machine that is being talked about.

Since you have not bothered to define what you mean by Leftist or Rightist I feel no need to do the same. I should also point out all ideas have "radical implications" if taken in certain direction. After Conservatism can mean a Theocracy, etc.
One would have to flesh out the actual ideas underpinning the conservativism we are talking about in order to say that. Burkian conservatism applied to the US certainly doesn't mean theocracy. Burkian conservitism is the opposite of radical. Equity as it is currently discussed is a radical concept with radical consequences.

Why? The fact that so many "Right" people are now prey to delusions like, Qanon, the stolen election, pizzagate etc., etc., isn't very "interesting"? Whatever.
Have you seen the length of the threads on these topics? Its a pointless discussion that will not lead to a conclusion or shared understanding. Having a pointless discussion about it doesn't interest me. I am more interested in the history of political ideas. I'm not sure that it would change anything for me if what ever set of ideas you mean here were all definitively and inarguably proved false. Given that, what's the point of arguing over it?

Your too funny. You have just regurgitated one of the most persistent delusions of political thinking ever. It is bluntly far more complicated than that. The implication that the "right" is 'mature" is hilarious. I suppose the stolen election crap is "mature" and so is Qanon. Whatever. I suppose the desire of so many in the USA for theocracy is "mature".
One can be wrong in a variety of ways. Some errors it takes a lot of education and brains to make. Being wrong isn't the same as being immature. Various forms of the old saying that if you aren't a socialist by the age of 25 you have no heart, and if you still are after 25 you have no head are very common. In youth, one sees the injustice in the world and wonders why people don't fix it. Later on one sees more and more examples of how difficult it actually is to fix things for the better. You get a family, and realise how fast time goes by and your priorities change. The quest for cosmic justice is just naturally more appealing to the young.

No reason to take this comment seriously at all.
You tell me you won't define left and right because I haven't defined it, then later on in the post you tell me that there is no reason to comment on the definition I gave. Is your definition of left and right a secret?

Not interested in playing anymore.
Again, there are other threads if all you want to do is debunk Jan 6th conspiracy theories. I've told you what I think, and you just mock and fail to respond. It does make it very easy to defend the left and attack the right if you have a private definition of them that you won't discuss.
 
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A sarcastic response is not a good, or any, counter argument. I suggest you read this and maybe learn something:



Eric Rauchway: Ph.D., History, Stanford University, 1996
M.A., History, Stanford University, 1993
B.A., Cum Laude in History and with Distinction in All Subjects, Cornell University, 1991
M.A., History, University of Oxford (by special resolution of congregation), 1998
There are ways that they have switched, and there are ways they haven't. In your post I don't disagree that there was a switch of the sort you describe. I do like the phrase "rhetorically committed" in there. That says a lot.

I mainly disagree with the rhetorical inferences that are drawn from claims of a switch.
 
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Great. And when you get a degree in US History you can argue that the parties didn't switch on the same level of credibility as the US historians who completely disagree with your opinion.
Apologies, I didn't realise I was only allowed to post if I was a credentialed academic. Do forgive me. ;-)

If you look back over my posts, you'll see that I wasn't arguing that there was no sense if which the parties had switched. I agree that there has indeed been a switch of the form recently quoted. I said that there were ways that they had and there were ways that they hadn't. What I objected to was the rhetorical use to which generalised claims of a switch are put.
 
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In my post I mentioned that the origin of the doctrine of unilateral succession at a whim originated not in any real conflict of principles of state vers Federal power but over the need to protect slavery. Before the Civil War it was a common belief and practice in the South to have absolutely NO problem with the extension of Federal power to extend / protect slavery. Thus in the South state after state had no problem with violations of "states rights" by the Federal government that extended / protected slavery. They had no trouble with the Federal government imposing slavery in a territory, (Complete with Slave Code.), they had no trouble with Territorial governments not allowed to ban or regulate slavery in anyway. And of course they saw it has a violation of "states rights" that if they could not take a slave into a territory thus demanding extraterritoriality for their laws.
Were the North always 100% consistent with their principles? The centralising tendency of power is a natural one. Has the South somehow won, I'm sure they would have centralised sooner or later. We cry for justice and our independence when we are weak, and then want to be obeyed when we are strong. I don't have any difficulty believing that the South genuinely believed in states rights, while violating aspects of it at the same time. People are hypocrites at the best of times, and a power struggle of the sort that was going on in the 50 years up until the civil war was not the kind of thing that left a lot of room for principled detachment.

After the Civil War the so-called "Lost Causers" erected a lying myth about the Civil War really being caused by a conflict between local autonomy and a potentially tyrannical Federal government. This is of course a lie. Of course counties within a state had no right to secede from the state. That type of local autonomy, could be and was crushed by the state.
The reason counties can't succeed from states and states can't succeed from the union is because they lack the power. Rights on this point are just a justification for the action of power.

The revolt was caused by the desire to keep a system of totalitarian like authority / control over c. 4 million human beings because those 4 million human being represented a vast source of wealth. In other words a revolt to support a system of tyranny.
So, the winners who wrote the history were the good guys and the losers who didn't were the bad guys? What a surprise. Are these good guys who were so concerned with the lot of oppressed humanity the same people that were fighting the Indian Wars? It is convenient when doing good serves your economic and political interests at the same time.

After the Civil War "states rights" was trotted out to justify another tyrannical system of authority, jim crow, segregation. Before the Civil War and after Many Southerners had absolutely no problems supporting theses tyrannies but resented deeply, has tyranny, any effort to remove, or moderate these tyrannies. The ironies are hilarious in a sick way.
None of this is actually an argument against states rights. There are always ways you could make the world better if only you were given just a little bit more power. Limiting that centralisation always involves accepting you aren't going to be able to force a solution to something that offends you. This is an argument for a virtuous authoritarian tyranny.

Before the Civil War many Southerners regarded with favour Supreme Court decisions that extended slavery, minimized protections for American Blacks etc. Thus for example Southern States routinely violate the rights of Black American Citizens.
I agree, terrible things happened. None of this is a secret.

The tyrannical power of State governments to screw over people was to be enhanced and any interference to lesson that tyrannical authority was of course tyranny?! Whatever.
Yes. Obviously. Centralising power in this way is necessarily tyrannical. Hopefully it is a virtuous tyranny, that's about the best one can say.

By the eve of the Civil War it was routine in the South to denounce has a violation of "states rights" Northern state laws that absolutely forbade slavery, and in fact even the Northern state laws that in the past had there abolished slavery were denounced has violations of "states rights". Many Southerners were looking forward to a Supreme court decision that would strike down Northern laws that forbade the transit of slaves through the territory of states; a violation of "states rights" and an assertion of Federal authority.
I like all this "many southerners". How many?

The whole right of succession issue was little more than a paper thin rational for the real cause - the defence of slavery.
What a remarkably clean narrative. It really turns the whole thing into a morality tale where the good guys took a break from killing Indians to fight a noble war to free their fellow men before going back to killing Indians. Again, it is the most amazing coincidence that the good guys were the winners and the war also served their economic and political interests. Such are the coincidences of history, I suppose?
 
You are right. The Democrat platform today is just the same as the Republican platform in the 1860s. How could I have failed to see it?

No one claimed they were 'just the same' at all as your comment included. Unless we missed the Democratic platform of today including the Fugitive Slave Act, the Homestead Act the demand to admit Kansas as a state, and building a railroad to the Pacific?

There are ways that they have switched, and there are ways they haven't.

No ****: see above. But the way of looking at the role of and power of the federal government, immigration, preservation of the Union, etc absolutely has.

In your post, I don't disagree that there was a switch of the sort you describe. I do like the phrase "rhetorically committed" in there. That says a lot.

I mainly disagree with the rhetorical inferences that are drawn from claims of a switch.

For example?
 
The Deputy AG, Lisa Monaco, has said the DOJ is investigating the fake elector certifications fraudulently sent to the National Archives by groups in seven states. Be afraid, morons, be very afraid. Including R Giuliani.
 
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No one claimed they were 'just the same' at all as your comment included.
That comment was sarcasm. I've addressed what people claimed specifically in other posts. Having said that, you did say:

[Today's Republicans] refused to believe the two parties basically swapped platforms keeping only their names.
That may have mislead me into thinking you were making a rather broad claim.

Unless we missed the Democratic platform of today including the Fugitive Slave Act, the Homestead Act the demand to admit Kansas as a state, and building a railroad to the Pacific?
We can perhaps abstract those policies into their motivating ideas and agree there is more going on there than a position on limited government. Again, you were the one who said they "basically swapped platforms keeping only their names". Now you are arguing with me that there are all these other things in their platform that I'm not taking into account?

No ****: see above. But the way of looking at the role of and power of the federal government, immigration, preservation of the Union, etc absolutely has.
These are a collection of ideas that when you are the dominant power in the Union you will favour because they make you stronger, and if you are the weaker power you will be against because they make you weaker. They are not remotely independent variables. I'm not sure that one could be in favour of centralising federal power and against the preservation of the union coherently without some very extreme circumstances. It's a trivial observation.

Again, as I have said already, my main objection is with the rhetorical use that these "the parties have switched" statement is put to. The Republicans represented the ascendant force within the union in 1870, so of course they were pro federal power. The Republicans are in the opposite position in 2022, so of course they tell their base they are against it. I had a look back, in 1984 when Reagan got his huge win, Mondale still got 85% of the vote in DC. In '72 when Nixon won everything DC was 78% Democrat. The federal government has been Democrat for a long time.
For example?
Look, we've gone from you saying that the Republicans and Democrats have "basically swapped platforms keeping only their names" to restricting that to a particular set of policies positions centered on centralising power in the federal government. I disagreed with the original broad statement, I'm not sure that I disagree with the current statement.

If we go back to your original claim that Republicans "refused to believe the two parties basically swapped platforms keeping only their names", what is it about it that they refuse to accept? Are we talking about the narrow claim that it is about limited government? Are you saying that they think Lincoln was a states rights, limited federal power kind of a President, or do they think the Republican Party's current platform is about centralising power in the Federal government?

Let's stick with your example. What is the claim about the parties having swapped attempting to get them to agree to that they are rejecting. It feels to me like something beyond their views on centralised power is involved here.
 
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It's not a question of personal virtue, it's a question of authoritarianism, of legally manipulating the system so it will be impossible to kick them out of power, regardless of what the electorate desires.
That seems a bit unlikely. It's not very hard to skew things by a few points here or there, but it would take more than some questionable boundary decisions and voter ID to make it "impossible to kick them out of power, regardless of what the electorate desires".
 
That the power-hungry will always grab power does not mean that when they try to grab even more, we don't do more to prevent it, to mitigate its impact, and to return as much power as possible to the electorate itself (within the anti-democratic confines of the Constitution), to increase democracy over authoritarianism.
To do that, you need a power equal to or greater than they have to stop them. What is that power, and how do you prevent it from falling into the hands of the power hungry?

Playing one group off another need not be the only system that pushes back against the power-hungry.
I guess there is the threat of violent revolution. Did you have something else in mind?
 
Maybe it’s a case of the exception proving the rule, but…Jimmy Carter?
Maybe he is. On the one hand he didn't survive too long at the top, on the other I haven't read enough about his life to really say. You don't become President without a bunch of people with a bunch of money backing you over a bunch of hyper competitive power hungry lunatics. I guess sometimes the joke candidate gets too much of a lead before anybody has quite realised what's happening. Doubtless there are other ways that the wrong kind of person can make it to the Oval Office, but I think it requires some kind of glitch in the matrix for this to happen.
 

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