But this isn’t

  • @TropicalDingdong
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    497 months ago

    Yeah but also the reliance on ‘norms’ is part of the problem.

    We relied on the ‘norm’ of R v W when no law was on the books stating otherwise.

    We’re relying on the ‘norm’ of a 2 term president when no law is on the books stating otherwise.

    We need to actually codify norms into something enforceable if we want them to have real meaning. Otherwise they are just opinions.

    • @Korne127
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      647 months ago

      when no law is on the books stating otherwise

      There actually is one (even a constitutional amendment). It was introduced after Franklin D Roosevelt’s served a third and a fourth term.

      • ignirtoq
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        267 months ago

        That’s part of what makes Trump’s talk of a 3rd term both ridiculous and terrifying. It would violate the Constitution, so a radical change to our country would have to happen for that to happen. All of our “inalienable rights” are guaranteed by the Constitution, so if they throw it away for a 3rd Trump term, they can throw it away for anything else they want. Want to go back to only white men who own land voting? It’s the Constitution blocking that. Making treason a crime? The Constitution. Once they break that, we’re hosed.

        • @dil
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          137 months ago

          They’re already throwing out the Constitution. Fourteenth amendment says he’s ineligible to be president because of the insurrection.

          • @elephantium
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            107 months ago

            That should have been a slam dunk impeachment conviction. That the discussion even gets to the 14th makes me weep for the country I thought I grew up in.

        • @[email protected]
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          27 months ago

          This isn’t new at all, so if anything ignoring the 22nd is just furthering the current trajectory of decline imo. What happened to our “inalienable right” to privacy, supposedly guaranteed by the 4th amendment, after 9/11 and the ensuing bipartisan surveillance bill known as the Patriot Act?

        • @UnderpantsWeevil
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          17 months ago

          It would violate the Constitution

          Hardly the first time we’ve done that in this country.

    • @ChonkyOwlbearM
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      137 months ago

      From a game theory perspective, it is impossible to create a system that is immune to bad faith actors. They will always find cracks to squeeze through. The people within the system have to proactively police against bad faith actors.

      • @HappycamperNZ
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        77 months ago

        You can make a system thats immune- you just have to make they pay offs force a better result than being self interested. The mafia broke the prisoners dilemma by killing everyone that confessed - we should apply the same and execute Trump for attempting to breach the constitution for his own self interest. See how many people try again.

        • mozz
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          7 months ago

          The mafia is not famous for being able to provide a stable environment which is safe for the people within it who follow the rules and can scale up to hundreds of millions of people while keeping everything relatively safe and reasonable

          “We’ll just kill everyone who threatens us” is a tempting solution for a government that is under threat, but the historical examples of that strategy playing out well for anyone even over the short term are few and far between, even when it seemed pretty justified at the time

          • @HappycamperNZ
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            27 months ago

            You’re right they aren’t, I was using it as an example. I’m not fully versed in UCMJ (think thats the right one) but as ex commander in chief Trump is a part of the armed forces, and the penalty for Treason is execution. Not asking a new law to come out, only a reminder that we have laws, and no one is above them.

        • @ChonkyOwlbearM
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          27 months ago

          Then the bad faith actors will just exploit that system to kill people they want dead.

    • @Windex007
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      87 months ago

      That’s true. Relying on norms is a problem.

      But, I think it’s still worth pointing out that there has been a wild shift.

      Maybe there have never been good Republicans. Maybe. That’s irrelevant.

      Consider the man who took down McCarthy: a republican crushing a “fellow” republican. There existed a point, where the man who asked “Have you no decency?” Was “on the same team”.

      There is nuance to the conversation. I don’t ask a republican to be ashamed for identifying as a republican. I only ask them to be ashamed of the state of the Republican party. Don’t tell people you’re the party of Lincoln. BE the party of Lincoln.

      • mozz
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        67 months ago

        “How Democracies Die” goes into quite a bit of detail about this – basically, it is impossible to run a system purely by making the right laws, because the system is made of people. The laws can say whatever you want. If the people start to betray them, the system will fold.

        In practice (so says the book) every single democratic government depends on a structure of norms, and violation of norms and laws goes hand in hand to form the eventual collapse into fascism when it happens.

        They also say that resistance from the establishment conservatives (that the fascists are trying to invade and co-opt from within) is generally the key factor that can prevent a fascist takeover. Which is pretty fuckin worrying when you look at the modern Republicans.

        • @[email protected]
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          07 months ago

          resistance from the establishment conservatives (that the fascists are trying to invade and co-opt from within) is generally the key factor that can prevent a fascist takeover.

          That’s a very idealist understanding of fascism, I’m not sure your book is worth anything if the author thinks fascism just a thing that happens and can be stopped by individuals instead of examining the system that creates the conditions for fascism.

          • mozz
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            7 months ago

            Learning from people even if they don’t agree with all of your existing conclusions, or want to present well researched facts and conclusions that are outside the scope of your favorite model and your favorite facts to present, is a good thing, not a bad thing.

            Case in point: I am genuinely curious, what would you say is the way to structure a society so that it won’t have within it the natural ingredients for collapsing into fascism over time? If you’re going to say (I assume) that capitalism will inevitably turn into fascism as time goes by?

            (The book is obviously more complete and well researched than my one sentence summary alone, since it draws from 10-20 countries and the exact details of how fascism arose or didn’t in each one, and what might be the factors that were instrumental in why it happened the way it did in each. That factual analysis and examination of history to see how reality tends to play out I think is pretty invaluable to being able to understand. That said, your broader point, that maybe we shouldn’t get too deep into the nuts and bolts of how things play out once they reach the crisis point without looking firmly at the factors that brought the countries to the crisis point in the first place, I actually think is a really good point.)

        • @Windex007
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          -27 months ago

          Interesting.

          Makes me kinda sad that there is a democrat mentality that there CAN’T be a good Republican. It politically disincentivises any republican to be that voice.

          Which is probably why the Russian interference playbook is to reinforce the notion that there can not be a good Republican (or democrat).

          • @[email protected]
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            27 months ago

            Tell me one republican policy that is good. No more weapons for Ukraine doesn’t count because they only think they need those weapons to use on Mexico, Iran, and China.

            If the end result of every policy a politician supports is bad, how can they be a good politician?