The first step in change is recognizing what is fucked up.. — schopenhauer1
But to my previous point, what do you suppose to do systematically, as you were stating? — schopenhauer1
I disagree, however, that character is entirely irrelevant. People with character would resist the worst extremes the system would allow. Which, although not a solution to any systemic problem, would dampen some of the consequences. — Benkei
As I said to someone else, if, at this point, you're still trying to convince people that things are fucked up, the only person living under a rock is you. The only idiot in the room is you. — StreetlightX
My proposals are largely negative: don't individualize politics. Don't psychologize politics. Look to things that will have mass effects on how people engage with the world around them; if you're not discussing something in social terms, it's probably not worth very much. If you're not looking at how power is operating (who is doing what to whom for whose benefit?), then you're doing more mystifying than helping. — StreetlightX
1. Unlimited cash for political advertisement
2. A winner takes all system
3. Political appointment of judges
4. Disconnect between rich politicians and normal people means normal people's problems aren't taken care of (an issue in most Western democracies, just that Congressmen in the US are filthy rich) — Benkei
One of the hard things about this is that much of this is opportunistic: you need a sense of what the Greeks called kairos, seizing the right time, intervening at the right moments, if you're in the right position. The conversations we have prepare the ground, they enable those who are in a position (not usually people like you and me) to tap into something existing and take it from there. 'We' can't change the funding rules for governments, but we can talk about it and put it on the agenda until it becomes impossible to ignore. — StreetlightX
One of the hard things about this is that much of this is opportunistic: you need a sense of what the Greeks called kairos, seizing the right time, intervening at the right moments, if you're in the right position. The conversations we have prepare the ground, they enable those who are in a position (not usually people like you and me) to tap into something existing and take it from there. 'We' can't change the funding rules for governments, but we can talk about it and put it on the agenda until it becomes impossible to ignore. — StreetlightX
That stuff isn't going to appeal to anyone with a mental age of more than 12. So, yes, it will be very effective among his fan base.
Such bad political strategy.
Trump’s very presence and his contrast to previous politicians has forced many to think about politics again (some, it seems, for the first time in their lives), leading to a stronger left and right on the American political field. — NOS4A2
This, though, is entirely right. Trump has been an incredible force of galvanization, for the right and left alike. The left certainly has alot to thank him for. Zizek was right, imo, of seeing a Trump presidency as a far better prospect for the left than a Clinton one, even though he got railroaded by the left for it. — StreetlightX
will he get convicted and removed? Doubtful — schopenhauer1
However, I remain unconvinced that a Trump presidency has been, in hindsight, 'desirable' for the Left, given the substantive damage done by the Trump administration, and more generally, a GOP controlled government to the lives of people. The conceptual tools for critiquing Capitalism remain as relevant as ever (if not more so than in decades past), with or without Trump. — Maw
I'll look to what silver linings there might be — StreetlightX
Trump’s very presence and his contrast to previous politicians has forced many to think about politics again (some, it seems, for the first time in their lives), leading to a stronger left and right on the American political field. — NOS4A2
This, though, is entirely right. Trump has been an incredible force of galvanization, for the right and left alike. — StreetlightX
That "force", is a force of division. Whether a divisive force within a people is better than a unifying force within a people depends on one's attitude towards the people.
I think one of the things in our purview is to change the kinds of conversations that dominate the public space, and change the terms of what is important. I think the power of this is massively underestimated: normalizing ideas, altering the landscape of what is possible. The right I think understood this incredibly well, and still continues to. — StreetlightX
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.