- cross-posted to:
- usa@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- usa@lemmy.ml
Um, no. The entire system is broken; the GOP is just the natural result and most obvious symptom of that breakage.
The fact that land gets more importance than people in our system is a big part of why Republicans have as much power as they have. We need to at least fully industrialize our system so that having a ton of land in an empty state doesn’t give you the right to dictate national policy.
Sadly, this will require a Constitutional Convention, which will under our current Constitution gives even more power to these states.
Interestingly the article governing Constitutional Conventions is under Article 5. I really hope we don’t have two of those at once. Things will get very confusing.
Given all the corruption a constitutional convention would be the final nail the coffin.
Personally I wouldn’t let the systematic flaws in our government system off the hook for enabling things like this to happen, having no formal way for citizens to recall federal representatives, and allowing justice to crawl so slowly it may not stop someone who committed crimes around and about the election in time from wining the next election and setting up a sham trial or impeachment that clears him and prevents him from being charged with that crime under double jeopardy laws ever again like they just did with Ken Paxton. A healthy system doesn’t ever get to where we are and there’s no getting around that it’s part of the problem. It really seems like the laws of this country are not enough to save it.
Nope. It’s money. Republicans are just a symptom.
Get rid of Citizens United and watch how things change.
Citizens united is also a symptom though, frankly I think we’re at the point where we either need a whole slew of constitutional ammendments, or a whole new one altogether, but I don’t see how either of those options is happening any time soon
Getting rid of Citizens United would be a great first step but things were going downhill way before that. CU was just gas (continually) poured on an already burning dumpster.
But you’re right that money (and the corruption/influence it buys) is the root of all our political problems.
In related news: duh.
Thing is they don’t see themselves as broken. They see themselves as who they want to be - future dictators of America.
Everyone here claiming to have the answer are identifying things that aren’t true in other places in the world that have the same problem: right wing extremist populism.
Our consistent and ill-advised infatuation with a two-party system — something that the Founding Fathers did not include in the Constitution — has always been balky,
This doesn’t make sense to me. Shouldn’t infatuation be either consistent or balky?