NO system of government is perfect. Ours is improvable, but it isn't a total disaster, either. — "Bitter
I am pretty sure that you were first to call someone sex into question because they disagree with you. — Constrained Maximizer
I think that you might be confusing "reading someone" and "psychoanalyzing someone". — Constrained Maximizer
Your accusations are both rude and intellectually vapid, but the delicious irony is arguably the best part of it all. — Constrained Maximizer
People from the Congo? — Constrained Maximizer
Ah, yes, the ghetto, where they usually develop theories about "regulated capitalism" or "laissez faire capitalism". I think that that's where John Rawls and Ronald Dworkin are originally from. As for "white men", just who do you think is coming up with communitarian/egalitarian/socialist thought? People from the Congo? — Constrained Maximizer
Capitalism is such an obviously desirable thing that, barring having been woefully misled by a plethora of bad arguments popular within academic circles, it's quite difficult to see just why anyone would oppose it, let alone vehemently oppose it. Those who devise unreasonable conceptions of 'justice' and bark orders at their fellows from their academic ivory tower would do well to at least not have the audacity to accuse anyone else of being far removed from the "common man" or of supporting the cause of "the few". — Constrained Maximizer
Secondly, you say changing the senate structure would be nearly impossible since it would hurt the republicans. I’m sorry, but demographics nationally refute your proposition.
The original process for senate elections was via state legislatures. The GOP currently controls 30 of them; maybe 31. Around there. Those numbers will little change in short course.
Thus, there is an exceedingly valid reason for the GOP to change the current structure-i.e., to return to state elections as a more secure means of being elected. — Reshuffle
Pretty unbelievable that anyone can defend free market Capitalism in the year two thousand nineteen — Maw
The father of the constitution, Madison, would disagree. He offers multiple valid justifications for the senate in The Federalist Papers 62 and 63.
Personally, I think he struck gold when espousing the notion of its deliberative mode, by virtue of six year terms, as a tool to counterbalance the frenzy and passions of the hour. — Reshuffle
Absolute jabberwocky. — Maw
1) an amendment to be ratified requires three-fourths of the states’ approval; it’s two-thirds in ( of) Congress.
2) “impossible” seems an odd adjective since the current method of direct election was, in fact, eagerly changed and welcomed by the senate, following the antecedent and original process of state ( legislature) elections. — Reshuffle
if you knew the history a little better. — tim wood
I don't think the House is much better or better than the Senate, despite be more numerically correct. — Coben
. The two party system is also very damaging, especially — Coben
I think worse undermining of democracy comes from campaign finance, lobbying, consolidation of the media, and revolving doors between industy and government, for example in oversight of industry. — Coben
But a specific discussion is beyond this thread. — StreetlightX
You all ought to burn that constitution too. It's an awful document. — StreetlightX
Our unconscious is as much us as our consciousness is. Actually, more. Just because it's not conscious doesn't mean we're not aware, that we're not responsible for what we do. Most of what we are is not conscious. This is the fundamental insight of psychology. It's what Freud gave us. — T Clark
There's more to life than private property. I have a lot of possessions, and they mean a lot to me. Some I bought, some given to me, some I found, and there's probably a few that I borrowed and forgot to return. Each one is in my possession and is mine. But if I said I have the right to claim any of these things as my private property I'd be referring to the legal status given by the State. — Metaphysician Undercover
And then I wondered if the chair was your example. — Terrapin Station
Was that your example? So a chair doesn't really look like a chair from a frame of reference that's however many inches or feet away from it and that includes the whole of the chair or a big section of it? — Terrapin Station
It gives you the things in themselves at particular reference points and everything is always relative to some reference point or other, with there being no preferred reference point. — Terrapin Station
