Hamilton was a monarchist. — frank
I think the quote you posted is an argument for monarchy. — frank
I'm not quite getting your point. — frank
Hamilton was a monarchist.
— frank
On what basis do you say that? — Paine
An attempt to create an elective monarchy in the United States failed. Alexander Hamilton argued in a long speech before the Constitutional Convention of 1787 that the President of the United States should be an elective monarch, ruling for "good behavior" (i.e., for life, unless impeached) and with extensive powers. Hamilton believed that elective monarchs had sufficient power domestically to resist foreign corruption, yet there was enough domestic control over their behavior to prevent tyranny at home.[44] His proposal was resoundingly voted down in favor of a four-year term with the possibility of reelection. — Wikipedia
Read the Federalist Papers I linked to. Hamilton constantly contrasts the character of the Executive against the nature of the English monarch. — Paine
The context of #70 is that a number of groups were arguing that the office of President should be a plurality of some kind. The Constitution was written only recognizing a single occupant. Hamilton's comparison with the British Monarchy is to note that the Monarch does not have the checks on his power that the President has so the role of councils should not be seen in the same light. — Paine
Ok. Musk is working under Trump's authority, so there is no plurality. — frank
In this case, Hamilton is addressing decisions that the Executive makes and does not want to own. — Paine
Would you grant that your example of willful unaccountability of an agency, which is supposed be overseen by Congress, is different than the motives behind the formation of DOGE? — Paine
How does your question relate to my assertion that monarchy will not provide the efficiency you suggest it could provide? — Paine
I didn't say anything about efficiency. It's the effectiveness of monarchy that caused every ancient democracy to transition into monarchy. — frank
King-making is a deep seated drive and this has played out in American history and the presidency has evolved from a minor federal figurehead to something like a king in the sense that the whole political tone changes due to presidential agenda. This is not the result of a nefarious plot. It's because over and over, we found that an integrated, centralized authority can solve problems that the competing states simply can't. — frank
Different in what way? — frank
The agencies and bureaus are established through law whereas DOGE has sprung directly from Trump's forehead. — Paine
Exactly. This is why I see it as easily the most disastrous of his plans. The Feds also benefit from a great deal of prestige. People want to work there. They get to recruit from top schools the way big consulting or law firms do, despite paying a fraction of the pay. They are going to lose that. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Good luck with that. Let the supreme court think about it make a decision once the things have been already done.I guess if there's something unconstitutional about DOGE, somebody will bring a case to the SCOTUS and sort it out. — frank
(US State Department, 2022) According to its constitution, Hungary is a multiparty parliamentary democracy. The unicameral National Assembly (parliament) exercises legislative authority. For the past three years, however, Hungary has been operating under consecutive states of emergency that allow the government to pass laws by edict, bypassing parliament, which elects the president (the head of state) every five years. The president appoints a prime minister from the majority party or coalition in parliament following national elections every four years. In parliamentary elections on April 3, the Fidesz-Christian Democratic People’s Party alliance led by Fidesz party leader Viktor Orban won a two-thirds majority in parliament. The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe election observation mission found that the elections “were well-administered and professionally managed but marred by the absence of a level playing field” and concluded that a “pervasive overlap between the ruling coalition and the government blurred the line between the state and party.” Orban has been prime minister since 2010.
Since 2015, under a declared state of emergency prompted by mass migration, defense forces may assist law enforcement forces in border protection and handling mass migration situations. In September the migration-related state of emergency was renewed for an additional six months. A constitutional amendment from May introducing a state of emergency due to Russia’s war against neighboring Ukraine granted the government the power to rule by decree through November, which was later extended until May 31, 2023. Civilian authorities maintained effective control over the security forces. There were no reports that members of the security forces committed systematic abuses, although there were credible reports that security forces assigned to the southern border abused migrants attempting to enter the country.
Significant human rights issues included credible reports of: actions that aimed to interfere with or diminish the independence of the judiciary; serious restrictions on freedom of expression and media, including censorship and content restrictions at the public service media broadcaster; political intimidation of and legal restrictions on civil society organizations, as well as criminal and financial penalties for migration-related work of nongovernmental organizations; exposure of asylum seekers to risk of refoulement; corrupt use of state power to grant privileges to certain economic actors; and threats of violence and harassment by extremists targeting Roma and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and intersex persons.
these people do see the government as the real enemy here — ssu
Surely some disgruntled and powerful ex FBI/CIA types are making plans... — Tom Storm
It’s likely to get much uglier, don’t you think? — Tom Storm
I'm frankly very scared about it. A lot of people (including my dear other) think I'm overdoing it, but I think we're looking at the worst global crisis since 9/11. It dismays me that so many people are shrugging it off or falling in behind him. I don't think they understand what's happening. — Wayfarer
hey are expecting concentration camps any day soon. — Tom Storm
the remaking of America along radical libertarian lines. — Tom Storm
Well, those that voted for him wanted that. We have already seen on term of his government, so there's absolutely no way to be surprised now on what he is doing. He just continues from where he left in the last few months of the previous Trump administration.The unfortunate fact is that America has elected a President who hates Government and is also really bad at governing. — Wayfarer
Libertarian concentration camps? Yes, it seems so.This seems overly paranoid — Tom Storm
The Trump administration’s abrupt decision to repatriate the U.S. Agency for International Development’s overseas workforce has thrust the agency’s global staff into chaos and despair, as workers scramble to uproot their lives and brace for what they fear will be a shutdown of all American aid missions in 30 days.In interviews, USAID staffers said Tuesday’s recall order has sent them racing to make temporary housing arrangements back in the United States, identify new day cares or schools for their children, and plan for a future in which, as many now believe is inevitable, they are left unemployed.
These employees, some assigned to dangerous “hardship” posts, are attempting to navigate that process with little information from the Trump administration and while many are locked out of all agency computer systems.
“You find yourself in a foreign country, in all likelihood a place you moved to despite the terrorism or security risks, and you’re being treated as if you’re somehow an enemy of the state,” one USAID official told The Washington Post. “That’s not even the worst of it. You know that your career matters far less than the lives of those you were trying to help, and … a lot of them are going to die without American aid.”
...Some USAID officials now expected to return to the United States are just months into multiyear assignments. Many spoke with emotion about the disruption facing their families and anger at the characterization, by Musk and others, of USAID as a corrupt and “criminal” organization. The administration has produced no evidence indicating that is true. ...
USAID employees said that initially they were encouraged when Trump tapped Marco Rubio, who had supported foreign aid during his time as a U.S. senator from Florida, for secretary of state. Expecting tighter scrutiny from the Trump administration, some officials prepared dossiers for incoming agency leaders showing the impact of programs they oversee. ...
Rubio has said he regrets the recent actions hadn’t been in an “orderly fashion,” but he said the process had unfolded that way because USAID officials had not provided “information and access.” (a.k.a 'victim blaming'.)
“Congress sets our budget. They determine our priorities in country. It is not a USAID thing,” one employee in Africa said. “So when he says that … he’s feeding into this lie that USAID is this rogue agency. It is extremely hurtful.”
“What I have found to be more disheartening, as a someone who has dedicated their life to federal service and as an American, is Secretary Rubio’s willingness to parrot that narrative that somehow our disobedience and our insubordination is the cause of our current pain,” another affected official said. — Washington Post
He seems a decent fellow, but if actually was, he’d resign immediately. — Wayfarer
This is the man who’s first official act was to commute the sentences of 1500 people sentence to prison for storming the US Capital on 6th Jan 2021 — Wayfarer
Pardoning the January 6 protestors in 2025 formally completes the rejection of the manufactured narrative. It permits us to raise questions that have been too long avoided. It should prompt the masses who fell victim to psychological warfare to wonder what made them so vulnerable to manipulation. And it redirects the burden of shame to those—whoever they are—who tried to control a nation by manufacturing an ignoble lie. — Joshua Hochschild, Begging your Pardon
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