Obviously, traditional political categories and divisions are exploited by elite cadres whose true agendas may have little to do with the partisan values they purport to (or try to pretend to) espouse. — Pantagruel
I wonder if it would be possible to effect a fundamental break from outmoded traditional political categories in aid of an agenda of enlightened universal inclusion? — Pantagruel
I wonder if it would be possible to effect a fundamental break from outmoded traditional political categories in aid of an agenda of enlightened universal inclusion? — Pantagruel
Sure. Add stupidity and complacency. We can work backward through their history, circumstances, education and sources of [dis/mis]information, as well as their myopia, self-importance and trust in bad leaders.but are the voters not largely to blame for their lethargy, short-term thinking and self-interest? — Tom Storm
I don't know what enlightened universal inclusion means? Got an example? — Tom Storm
enlightened universal inclusion — Pantagruel
I think universal inclusivity ought to be the norm. — Pantagruel
I still don't understand what you mean by this. Can you provide some examples? Socialism or communitarianism, perhaps? — Tom Storm
I wonder if it would be possible to effect a fundamental break from outmoded traditional political categories in aid of an agenda of enlightened universal inclusion? — Pantagruel
Globally, we are roughly ten millennia on from living as hunter-gatherers outside of scarcity-driven/reproducing economies 'irregulated' by dominance hierarchies (e.g. theocracies; monarchies-aristocracies; autocracies-oligarchies; (potemkin) democracies; plutocracies-corporatocracies; ... hegemonies). In small numbers and living in uncrowded commons we tend to prefer 'egalitarian freedom over inegalitarian security'; currently, the global population exceeds 8 billion humans with over 90% of us crowded into cities of millions (or tens-to-hundreds of thousands) and towns of thousands of non-familial strangers such that material scarcities are exacerbated by cultural-status scarcities driving all kinds of tribal (i.e. populist) movements which seek 'inegalitarian security "in the name of" egalitarian freedom' (such as e.g. "enlightened universal inclusion"). IMHO, 'global civilization' is a millennia-old, (mostly) viciously circular, scarcity-trap that "traditional politics" seems needed in order to (barely) keep it going without collapsing into a catastrophic state from which it (we) might not be able to recover (... maybe, however, until now: anthropogenic climate change).I wonder if it would be possible to effect a fundamental break from outmoded traditional political categories in aid of an agenda of enlightened universal inclusion? — Pantagruel
There is an infinite amount of hope in the universe ... but not for us. — Franz Kafka
It will take more than a clear vision and good intentions to dislodge them. — Vera Mont
to effect a fundamental break from outmoded traditional political categories — Pantagruel
Again, as an ideological guide or norm, broad enough to bridge the traditionally divisive categories — Pantagruel
And by traditionally divisive categories do you mean things such owner/leaser, employer/employee, rich/poor, man/woman, student/teacher, or something else? — Lionino
More traditional political categories — Pantagruel
My sense is that the upper echelons benefit by playing groups off against one another in order to forestall their uniting against the common problem (the wealthy and privileged). — Pantagruel
Suggestions? — Pantagruel
There is this issue of political practicality, how can consensus be built to the optimum end. — Pantagruel
Itself annually paralyzed by disagreement over its funding. In the USA, the entire structure was badly designed: overcomplicated, inefficient, with too many weak points prone to corruption and internal conflict. (It's not the founder's fault, exactly. First, they assumed that governance would always be in the purview of their own tight little club. Even though they disagreed among themselves, they could reason and compromise; they spoke the same language and shared the same interests. They failed to foresee the advent of disparate elements and the reign of galloping unreason.)And then there is the associated question of the effectiveness of the apparatus of government, — Pantagruel
How could they be? The original practice was anything but. In spite of amendment after amendment, it has never been truly democratic, because there has never been equality of rights, freedoms or political power since that sentence of the declaration. It's rated in the world index as the first "deficient democracy", just below Israel, the last "working democracy" (one might question that). https://www.democracymatrix.com/ranking There are elements in the US that wield actual power that would push it relentless toward "hard autocracy".Are the existing voting practices even democratic? — Pantagruel
Sound education and responsible mass communications media would go a long way toward making that possible. — Vera Mont
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