11-12-2018, 07:08 PM
Quote: @medaille said:
Bravo!@BigAl99 said:
Great I get the compassionate conservative thing. What power are you proposing for sick people or the working poor or Single parents? Time travel to undo a bad break, decision or being born in a crap situation that you don't have the skills to get out of, is not an option. I agree with you that almost by definition that the
downtrodden have little “power” or “agency”, but I don’t think that it’s a
given that a federal level government is the correct answer for fixing the
problems that they have. The governments
we have now, by and large, aren’t acting in the interests of the citizenry. I think we can debate whose interests they
are serving, but I think it’s a given that they aren’t serving you, me, or
anybody else that could possibly be considered downtrodden or middle class. I think that the whole model we have for
governments is completely broken.
This is what politics looks like to me:
- Election
campaigns based on emotional, triggering topics that we won’t agree on,
with a very limited number of candidates who are less than inspiring.- Someone
wins, half the people feel like the worst candidate got elected. The other half feels relieved that the
worst candidate didn’t get elected but isn’t excited about their
candidate.- Politicians
spend a lot of time publicly arguing about emotional topics and pointing
fingers, but when it comes down to voting on things, they never make any
progress on the topics they talk about, but they have no problems passing giant bills under the cover of night.
I think if you want real change, you shouldn’t expect your
government to do it, because they don’t serve you. Giving them energy and money is just taking
away from people who could actually be fixing the problems. The biggest problem with our government is that
it is designed in an easily corruptible way.
The government siphons a tremendous amount of money out of the system,
yet isn’t really accountable to the people it’s supposed to serve. There’s no metrics to follow on whether any
law is actually working. Laws hardly
ever get repealed, so it’s a giant tangled mess that no one can really follow. There’s no transparency at all, every single
time you want to look at a potential corrupt politician, there’s so many
redactions that you can’t make any conclusions.
I think we have our models of self-organization upside
down. Instead of making bigger and
bigger governments/corporations to serve our needs that are all based half a
continent (or world) away from us, we need to focus on organizing at more local
levels in groups that we can effectively ensure are doing our bidding. I especially believe that “compassionate”
projects should be done at a local level.
If you are passionate about topic X, what’s more effective? Bitching about other people and trying to
force the government to tax them, so that a huge bureaucratic organization with
a poor track record of making progress on anything can try to solve your
problem using people that just want a paycheck and don’t actually care about
your issue? Or actually working with
people to make things better at some level with real people you can talk to and
real people that are getting helped?
I think people need to stop vilifying people that want to
cut government. We need to cut
government spending, because it isn’t cost effective at doing anything
worthwhile. We need a reasonable method
for building our own solutions, and then stopping the funding of government
programs that don’t do anything. We need
real metrics that track whether or not the government is actually doing good
work and where it isn’t.