Arathain Kelvar wrote:
There very much is an establishment. Electoral laws illustrate that clearly. It's incredibly difficult to get elected if you don't tie yourself to one of two parties. Then, cushy assignments once elected are typically based on seniority within the party, and/or how well you follow the party line.
You can only get elected if you belong to one of the two major parties because those parties represent what the majority of the people want. The other parties represent nutjobbery, either in the sense that they can't even nominate cohernet adults (witness the Peace and Freedom parties) or they simply can't appeal to the mainstream American.
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As for serious differences, there are some, but they are not many. There's a ton of small differences.
Substantial differences include things like positions on gun control, universal health care, and views (not necessarily translating to specific legislation) on the role of government.
That's the thing. In your subjective opinion, there are not a lot of major differences, but in the opinion of the public, there
are. The differences the public thinks are important
are what determines what the major differences are. You are entitled to your opinion, but the problem is not that everyone else does not share your opinion, and them not sharing your opinion does not make them stupid and you smart.
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Most of what we spend our time arguing about is insignificant details like do we provide unemployment benefits for X weeks or Y weeks, how much support to provide to aspiring college students, or how many electrodes we are allowed to connect to a terrorist's testicles (the difference between the two parties on this one is minor, at only 2 electrodes), etc.
And yet, those things are important because they speak to the major differences. Most people, if faced with a little of what they like versus a little of what they don't like will vote for a little of what they like rather than not vote or vote for the other side to "punish" the party that ostensibly represents their side of the spectrum for not being able to get it all.
That's part of what people don't understand. The way this country is set up, politicians are supposed to have to compromise. They are
supposed to be bickering about little details like weeks of unemployment. That is not the establishment keeping anyone down. That's the political "system" working as intended. It is intended to make sure no one ever gains complete political dominance. It is intended so that your politicians cannot do what makes sense to you because for every intelligent person on one side of the debater with airtight arguments, there's one on the other side with equally airtight arguments.
That's also why most of the arguments about "unConstitutional" government actions are so stupid. The Constitution was intended to strengthen the government over the Articles of Confederation, not limit it more, but most importantly, it was intended to protect government from
you. Government is very powerful, and very vulnerable to misuse. The politicians don't stick to minor issues because they want to keep anyone "enslaved" or because government "Wants to accumulate power". It doesn't. Government doesn't want to do anything. It has no desires, no nature, and it does not automatically pull power to it any more than it pulls it away. It all depends on how it's set up, and ours is set up so that you cannot dominate the system simply by getting more people or more states on your side. Every founding father feared that the people of some state other than the one he lived in would do something nefarious to his state. They had no "intent" there were many proposals for the document and the end result was a compromise of many viewpoints, no matter how much some people might like to pretend there's one specific meaning they personally just happen to be in possession of.
That's why present arguments seem to all go to the Supreme Court and the Constitution. Political debate in this country is, at this point, dominated by a public that, on both sides of the debate, needs to shut the **** up. The public is the problem. The people have become the problem. The problem is not that government has too much power; it's that it is trying to pander to two sides of an increasingly polarized public. The people have figured out that the only way to force the government to do what they want is to declare the opinions of the other side unConstitutional. Oh, not in terms of expressing them, everyone loves the first amendment, but in terms of
implementing them. It happens every time someone whines that a tax, or a government program is unConstitutional, and every time someone *****, screams, or moans that the Constitution demands that someone else foot the bill for their favored program in the name of "equality". Both sides are equally guilty.
The biggest problem in this country is people complaining that the other side of the political spectrum has the gall to exist. The Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street are both equally disgusting, and not because they both have equally silly idea, but because both of them want to demand that the country be run according to their principles and that the other side be relegated to simply shouting and screaming while the preferred side sits back and gets on with the business of doing things the "right" way and proclaims the other side "batshit insane". That's why comparisons to nazis, commies, socialists, and facists are so popular; because there really are fringe ideas out there that are nuts and if you can paint all your opponents that way, so much the better for proclaiming certain opinions out of bounds of the Constitution to actually try to implement.