tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10348701.post21919034033990778..comments2024-03-13T21:26:03.011-07:00Comments on Right on the Left Coast: Views From a Conservative Teacher: The Fundamental Division In US PoliticsDarrenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15730642770935985796noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10348701.post-4393925982021297212014-04-18T08:22:03.776-07:002014-04-18T08:22:03.776-07:00It's not like the founders had all that much c...It's not like the founders had all that much choice in whether they were creating a representative form of government. I doubt the people who'd just fought a nasty, lengthy war against a monarchy would have been all that excited at the prospect of swapping one monarch for another. No, we were going down the road to democracy even if a significant percentage of the population wanted a king that being all they'd known.<br /><br />Once you've determined that a democratic form is what you're going to use to build your governance structure you're faced with the details of how to go about building that government. In a sense it's an engineering challenge and not too unlike that faced by the students in this video - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2rpyCDKuyFI<br /><br />The problem is to build as robust as structure as possible since the materials you're given to work with aren't the sort that can be depended upon when the stresses get severe. Not a bad metaphor for the problems faced by the founders and that's what they did - engineered a government built of flawed, unreliable material to withstand stresses both internal and external while maintaining a degree of flexibility necessary to deal with unforeseeable circumstances. So far it's held up pretty well.allen (in Michigan)noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10348701.post-13122305241596490382014-04-17T17:20:57.622-07:002014-04-17T17:20:57.622-07:00I agree with Will, and with the founder about inal...I agree with Will, and with the founder about inalienable rights ... but the founders absolutely did NOT establish democracy ... and thank heavens they didn't. It's a representative democracy. They didn't trust people to vote intelligently, and rightfully so. If Nancy Pelosi can't be trusted to read a healthcare bill before voting on it... how can you expect the masses to? When we've attempted direct democracy in CA, via proposition, it almost never winds up well. Still ... I really detest 8 of our current supreme court justices. well ... 7. I find both the liberal and conservative wings completely predictable and not intellectually strong ... except for Scalia who I always like to hear from, though he makes some baffling decisions (the eminent domain case, for one). Kennedy ... I at least gets the sense that he considers each case on its merits and votes his conscience... Breyer was obviously wrong, and I guess if you want an example of a 'lefty' precept that is wrong ... it's a good one. I'm not sure it's helpful, though.maxutilshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11294262473781967372noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10348701.post-26368060545921299162014-04-17T13:46:26.991-07:002014-04-17T13:46:26.991-07:00Will is wrong.
The argument between conservatives...Will is wrong.<br /><br />The argument between conservatives and lefties - for the moment, progressives - is about whether the power of government is ultimately the possession of all the citizenry or whether that power must be directed by the self-selected wise and special. For the latter, any legal transgression is subordinated to a "common good" which inevitably results in poverty, authoritarianism and distinct, and legally enforced, societal classes.allen (in Michigan)noreply@blogger.com