• @aesthelete
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    6 months ago

    Sure, but that doesn’t mean that even discussing real or hypothetical measures to reign in corruption is inherently worthless because you can sometimes get around some of them.

    I hate the US “either we solve everything, or nothing is worth doing” mindset that’s pervasive in this country, and the only reason I responded is because you’re providing a good example of it.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil
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      -36 months ago

      I hate the US “either we solve everything, or nothing is worth doing” mindset

      I’m not a big fan of people wish casting naive solutions and then getting hostile when they hear the solutions aren’t viable.

      • @aesthelete
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        6 months ago

        You can make this same, tired, ultimately invalid argument about anything you look to improve.

        You can’t prevent the spread of all communicable disease, so why bother taking any precautions?

        Someone could build their own gun, so why bother preventing a convicted felon from buying an oozie?

        Someone could evade a line item tax by hiring a fancy lawyer and setting up bespoke legal structures around themselves as an entity, so why bother looking at closing any of the existing tax loopholes?

        The answer is that because it’s not fucking all or nothing. Sure, someone could hypothetically do lots of things to evade any precaution that you put in place around dangerous or bad things, but that doesn’t mean it’s completely ineffective. If it’s too much of a hassle, some people won’t bother. Some people will actually get caught. Hell, with the existing lax corruption laws and lazy ass enforcement in the US people are still sometimes found in violation of them.

        It isn’t a “if you ain’t first you’re last” situation. Reasonable safeguards, laws, standards, practices, and the like save and improve lives.

        • @UnderpantsWeevil
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          -26 months ago

          ultimately invalid argument

          This isn’t about arguing. The arguments we make don’t impact public policy.

          • @aesthelete
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            16 months ago

            Agreed, so why squabble with people pointing out that the US is more corrupt than other countries? It is.

            And it’s more corrupt because not only are we more accepting of corruption, but “we” (like you) largely don’t believe in incremental change or taking small measures to problem reduction…we largely believe in our version of “superman” arriving…I dunno what your thoughts actually are…maybe some gay space communism revolution that’ll never occur?

            I gotta tell ya at this point we’re much more likely to get full, mask-off fascism complete with gas chambers than we are to get any kind of communist revolution in the US.

            • @UnderpantsWeevil
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              06 months ago

              why squabble with people pointing out that the US is more corrupt than other countries?

              I started out illustrating instances in which politicians could end-run a simple bribery ban and it got dismissed as a uniquely American problem.

              And it’s more corrupt because not only are we more accepting of corruption

              I don’t think the US voter base is any more accepting of corruption than any other constituency. The courts are more accepting of corruption, but that’s largely because they are insulated from any kind of oversight or accountability.

              I gotta tell ya at this point we’re much more likely to get full, mask-off fascism complete with gas chambers than we are to get any kind of communist revolution in the US.

              We’ve had periods of mask-off fascism in the US going back centuries. From Indian Reservations to Jim Crow to Japanese Internment to Gitmo detention to kids stuffed into concentration camps on the US/Mexico border. But there are plenty of Americans who have lived through these periods and never really acknowledged it. That’s what allows fascism in the US to infest the body politic and to endure from generation to generation.

              Meanwhile, we’ve inoculated ourselves against any kind of mass labor movement with the most hysterical media and legal response to organized workers. Every AES state is a deplorable hell-hole, because some industry unionized or popular local leader took the reins from a failing foreign corporate interest. Every domestic labor movement is simultaneously described as a bunch of entitled greedy idiot teenagers, a gaggle of uppity minorities with drug problems, and a fifth column of foreign infiltrators trying to bring down the American economy.

              So I don’t doubt the next step will be towards another round of brutal, blood-drenched fascism. But the end result will be the further deterioration of the American project and the ultimate crack up of our unified economy. The only thing that can save America from itself is a new socialist turn. Without that, we’re headed for balkanization, further deindustrialization, and ultimate colonization from abroad.

              • @aesthelete
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                06 months ago

                I don’t think the US voter base is any more accepting of corruption than any other constituency.

                Counterpoints: the US voter base re-elected Nixon (and largely wanted him to stay in office)…elected and then re-elected Reagan (despite him openly admitting to lying to the American public and exchanging guns for hostages)…elected Trump in the first place, cast more votes for Trump in 2020 than they had in 2016, and now look like they might just go ahead and put the corrupt gasbag right back in there despite the fact that he’s openly corrupt, brags about it, and will likely get more corrupt in any second term.

                The only thing that can save America from itself is a new socialist turn.

                So there’s your version of superman. Within the current political environment, I just don’t see this happening without another depression or similar (so perhaps even decades more of what we currently got). I also am decidedly not someone in favor of eliminating democracy in favor of purportedly “temporary” one-party rule (that never fucking ends).

                • @UnderpantsWeevil
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                  06 months ago

                  Counterpoints: the US voter base re-elected Nixon

                  Nixon was able to capitalize on the sharp George Wallace split in the Democratic Party over the Civil Rights Act. The Nixonian attack on liberals boiled down to the claim that black people were naturally inferior, and any effort at repairing the damage inflicted by Jim Crow amounted to pro-black corrupt patronage.

                  then re-elected Reagan (despite him openly admitting to lying to the American public and exchanging guns for hostages)

                  Reagan wasn’t hit by Iran Contra until '87, and it nearly sank the Bush '88 campaign for President. Prior to that, he successfully campaigned as an anti-corruption tough-on-crime President, particularly in his prosecution of ABSCAM and other sting operations aimed at liberal politicians with big business ties.

                  So there’s your version of superman.

                  The idea of a single all-power Ubermensch Superman isn’t a socialist view. Time and again, large cooperative campaigns of mutual aid provide better outcomes than the public putting all our hopes on a handful of aristocratic elites.

                  Socialism or Barbarism. We either hang together or we hang separately.

                  • @aesthelete
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                    06 months ago

                    Reagan wasn’t hit by Iran Contra until '87, and it nearly sank the Bush '88 campaign for President.

                    My apologies for getting the timelines slightly mixed up. In my defense I was 4 at the time. However, Bush winning in '88 despite being neck deep in an administration full of openly admitted liars doesn’t exactly bode well for your argument that US voters aren’t pretty A-OK with corruption.

                    The idea of a single all-power Ubermensch Superman isn’t a socialist view.

                    Nah, it’s a human one, and one that’s extremely common in the US despite our governmental structure all but guaranteeing that one guy alone can’t fix things.

                    We love simple power structures, because we’re simple beings. It’s also why I think there is more to horseshoe theory than people want to admit. Communists claim to want gay space communism but seem A-OK with some stupid asshole being basically a dictator as long as its their type of stupid asshole.

                    Once we formed up larger civilized order, it took us millennia to conceive of a different type of governance aside from “what one stupid asshole says goes”.

                    Time and again, large cooperative campaigns of mutual aid provide better outcomes than the public putting all our hopes on a handful of aristocratic elites.

                    I somewhat agree? I think? But I’m not sure it has much to do with anything we’re discussing.