No significant dispute except on some of the stats/facts:
Talya wrote:
The majority of americans oppose abortion, and yet it is legal, because of basic individual rights laws.
Incorrect:
http://www.gallup.com/poll/1576/abortion.aspxAlso, it's legal due to the 4th Amendment, basically.
Talya wrote:
The majority of white americans 50-100 years ago were racist against black people, and the majority of men were sexist against women, and yet segregation laws were overturned, and discrimination based upon race is generally illegal, women were given the vote, and fixed rules about gender roles were gradually removed.
Non-quantifiable, but I won't dispute the core assertion. I'll contend that, again, the level of freedom does not reflect the method of governance.
Talya wrote:
The majority of Americans still oppose homosexuality, and yet America is moving inexorably toward treating them with the same dignity that straight people are treated.
Again, factually inaccurate, but the conclusion is correct, so no significant dispute.
First line item:
http://www.gallup.com/poll/162689/recor ... rally.aspxTalya wrote:
It's an interesting situation, because existing tyrannies of the majority have been slowly eliminated, and yet the political system is changing to allow them to continue. Perhaps one is a consequence of the other? I don't know.
A good question. I think one key consideration is that Screeling and I are talking about "tyranny of the majority" in the sense of the
governance method that stems from pure democracy. I think you're talking about "tyranny of the majority" in the sense of the
result of majority groups oppressing minority groups.
The latter is definitely disappearing, and that's what I meant when I say in a lot of ways we're a more free society than 200 years ago. I think the former is definitely increasing, and is disconcerting because it could undercut the gains of the latter, or of society more broadly.