Beryllin wrote:
Your system only allows people a say if they meet your criteria, otherwise, you'll tell them what laws they will live under. That is tyranny, and I don't care what name you try to disguise it with. So I think my attitude lines up pretty well with the Founders, who wanted a say in the laws they would live under, rather than have the laws dictated to them by the king of England.
It is no more tyranny than the current system you're attempting to appropriate. The Fourteenth and Seventeenth Amendments collectively remove your ability to impact the direction or choices of the government. Indeed, they nullified the Tenth Amendment and limited your ability to directly affect policy in any meaningful. So, I fail to see how your position lines up with the Founders.
You will also note, incidentally, that all Thirteen States present at the signing of the Constitution had vastly more restrictive franchise and citizenship policies than are present today. They enacted limitations and encapsulated certain positions from the general population. But, let's ignore that fact, right? We can also ignore all off the Federalist and Anti-Federalist papers that challenged universal suffrage and the ability of the masses to make judicious and informed political decisions; hence, there was a near unanimous opposition to true democracy (not to mention the logistical nightmare). And, perhaps we should also ignore the fact that individual citizens were functionally prohibited from directly influencing the election of the highest elected office.
Beryllin wrote:
Has not the SCOTUS ruled on such criteria? Were not poll taxes used by the franchised to prevent blacks from voting in the South? That's the side of history you want to line yourself up with?
Yes, actually, it has. And prior to the Fourteenth Amendment, the SCOTUS indicated numerous times that the States were free to set their own standards for citizenship and the final arbiters of who could and could not vote in the elections held in their state. Your confusion is the assumption that being a citizen of the United States trumps being a citizen of Virginia, when very few of the Founders actually held that position.
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Corolinth wrote:
Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.