I cant really come to any better conclusion..
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FriedrichNietzsche
92 Posts
I cant really come to any better conclusion.. | ||
KwarK
United States41539 Posts
On February 19 2024 00:10 FriedrichNietzsche wrote: The dumber (more senile to an extent) the president/s get the more I think we have to come to the conclusion their importance is very very small compared to bascially so many other things/institutions/entities/(even) individuals.. I cant really come to any better conclusion.. That is not the right conclusion. | ||
farvacola
United States18813 Posts
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FriedrichNietzsche
92 Posts
What is yours? | ||
JimmiC
Canada22817 Posts
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farvacola
United States18813 Posts
On February 19 2024 01:44 JimmiC wrote: I've always presumed the rules don't change because those in control of the rules are the ones being advantaged. But what is the stated arguments for not having term limits and other measures to limit the powers of for example of senators? Legislative term limits were opposed by the likes of Hamilton based in large part on the notion that working the legislative process takes a lot of highly specialized knowledge, knowledge that would be especially scarce if legislators were routinely termed out. That notion puts a bit too much faith in both the feedback effect of voting and the willingness of elder statesmen to observe norms that informally keep power in check. That said, Hamilton’s concern has plenty of merit that one can observe today, a shade of which concerns how term limits further empower lobbyists by ensuring they’re effectively the only long term players in the game of writing and passing legislation. In states with legislative term limits, like Michigan for example, there has been a clear trend towards straight lobbyist drafted bills. That’s not to say that term limits are necessarily inherently broken, only that they need to come alongside other significant reform. | ||
KwarK
United States41539 Posts
That the most powerful individual in an organization wields power. Trump wielded his ineptly but he still managed to fuck SCOTUS for a generation, crush American soft power abroad, and do untold damage to the economy. The institutions that prevented him from unilaterally withdrawing from NATO and closing all US military bases abroad mostly stopped him by requiring that he perform more paperwork than he had the attention span to perform. A more competent malicious president could have accomplished much more. It’s not that the office has no power, it’s that the same issues that make Trump malicious also make him incompetent. | ||
GreenHorizons
United States22338 Posts
On February 19 2024 01:54 farvacola wrote: Legislative term limits were opposed by the likes of Hamilton based in large part on the notion that working the legislative process takes a lot of highly specialized knowledge, knowledge that would be especially scarce if legislators were routinely termed out. That notion puts a bit too much faith in both the feedback effect of voting and the willingness of elder statesmen to observe norms that informally keep power in check. That said, Hamilton’s concern has plenty of merit that one can observe today, a shade of which concerns how term limits further empower lobbyists by ensuring they’re effectively the only long term players in the game of writing and passing legislation. In states with legislative term limits, like Michigan for example, there has been a clear trend towards straight lobbyist drafted bills. That’s not to say that term limits are necessarily inherently broken, only that they need to come alongside other significant reform. Don't need legislative term limits for that though do they? It's been a long-accepted truth in Washington that lobbyists write the actual laws www.npr.org (2013) So it's back to the hamster wheel 1. There's a problem 2. Politicians won't fix it 3. Need to replace the politicians with ones that will 4. Can't replace the politicians because of how the system works 5. Need to fix the system 6. Politicians won't fix it (because it benefits them) 7. Repeat ad nauseam. | ||
farvacola
United States18813 Posts
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FriedrichNietzsche
92 Posts
On February 19 2024 03:20 KwarK wrote: That the most powerful individual in an organization wields power. Trump wielded his ineptly but he still managed to fuck SCOTUS for a generation, crush American soft power abroad, and do untold damage to the economy. The institutions that prevented him from unilaterally withdrawing from NATO and closing all US military bases abroad mostly stopped him by requiring that he perform more paperwork than he had the attention span to perform. A more competent malicious president could have accomplished much more. It’s not that the office has no power, it’s that the same issues that make Trump malicious also make him incompetent. Well so far you have written that the POTUS has power. I never doubted that for one moment. I am not saying that I am a genius in terms of history knowledge but the stuff I looked into almost always lead to the same pattern: IF certain institutions and entities want certain things to happen (especially "war" & "operations") they just happen. And the POTUS basically just more or less accepts it. Do you completely disagree with this? | ||
GreenHorizons
United States22338 Posts
On February 19 2024 04:16 farvacola wrote: Yes, lobbyists wield far too much influence even with respect to legislatures that don’t have term limits. No dispute there. The question is rather one of degree; how much worse could it get? My first thought is: Replacing politicians with the corporations, donors, and lobbyists they currently act as somewhat unruly proxies for. That "change" then consolidates into a single "party" of capital that controls all 3 branches of government and the "fourth estate" as well. My immediate accompanying thought is that "it can't get that bad" because people would revolt and the thin veneer of stuff like legislatures "writing bills" *wink* *wink* is what holds it to together. But if you've followed the thread lately, you'll have noticed it's not doing much for my optimism people won't just "lesser evilism" themselves down to cheering for their preferred billionaires' teams while ignoring/accepting/cheering the oblation of humanity to a global racial capitalist hegemony | ||
Acrofales
Spain17700 Posts
On February 19 2024 04:28 FriedrichNietzsche wrote: Well so far you have written that the POTUS has power. I never doubted that for one moment. I am not saying that I am a genius in terms of history knowledge but the stuff I looked into almost always lead to the same pattern: IF certain institutions and entities want certain things to happen (especially "war" & "operations") they just happen. And the POTUS basically just more or less accepts it. Do you completely disagree with this? Yes. It's about as nonsensical as claiming a CEO of a company has just accept what his senior employees want to happen. | ||
FriedrichNietzsche
92 Posts
USA as an entity and the POTUS is not remotely the same as a company and a CEO. IF you think that fits.. you dont have the slightest idea how many different powers exist.. Actually the system that leads to wars & operations is so unbound from individuals.. is such a obvious observation to make when you simply look at the recent history of the USA (lets say a couple of decades).. I honestly feel like we are living in different worlds. Actually I had this conversation with someone iRL. About "systems" and "individuals". What do you think happens if a CEO from a company (Im not saying your analogy makes much sense.. just using it in a different way here) feels the things his company is doing is ethically wrong and he quits? Does this stop things from happening? Of fucking course not. A new CEO will be installed and almost precisely the same things will keep on happening. Rinse and repeat. Didn't we all wonder how Obama got the peace nobel prize whilst drone strikes were ever increasing? Didnt Obama have the nimbus of a more peacefully minded Potus? I mean.. am I saying a POTUS has no power in deciding things what so ever? Of course not. But you guys cant truly think that when the different entities are set for certain goals/plans the POTUS can stop these things. Like just look at the history. Even the presidents who actively tried to stop certain things (JFK and Vietnam comes to mind) simply failed in the grand scheme of things.. or were unfortunately replaced by a new potus who was willing to do what the industrial military complex and whatever other entities wanted. I can't possibly be alone in thinking that system/s > individual/s | ||
Sadist
United States7074 Posts
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Simberto
Germany11207 Posts
On February 19 2024 05:56 Sadist wrote: On one hand POTUS can unilaterally launch nuclear weapons which makes it arguably the most powerful position. On the other hand, since using Nuclear weapons is unthinkable you could argue POTUS is significantly weaker than the legislative branch. Depends on how you want to think about it. This reads like a setup for a president Trump going: "Congress better do X, or i will nuke congress!" Edit: Sorry, of course i meant: "So there are these people, very bad people, the worst, really bad. And they are ruining our country. They are not passing the right laws, you know? Very bad people. And i was thinking, i got this red button. Really shiny, really red. Kinda like my dick last night. Doctor told me i need medicine, but i don't, they are wrong. Really red knob. Launches missiles. Big missiles. The best. Really good missiles, they just gave me this button, came to me and said "We know you are very smart, the best. Take the button." Very bad people, not passing laws. Letting China win. And i was thinking, i got this red button. Why not just push it? Problem is gone. But that is just me thinking. Putin doesn't have these problems, people always do what he wants. Have i told you about that time in Russia, ..." | ||
Acrofales
Spain17700 Posts
On February 19 2024 05:48 FriedrichNietzsche wrote: That analogy is very far off from reality.. USA as an entity and the POTUS is not remotely the same as a company and a CEO. IF you think that fits.. you dont have the slightest idea how many different powers exist.. Actually the system that leads to wars & operations is so unbound from individuals.. is such a obvious observation to make when you simply look at the recent history of the USA (lets say a couple of decades).. I honestly feel like we are living in different worlds. Actually I had this conversation with someone iRL. About "systems" and "individuals". What do you think happens if a CEO from a company (Im not saying your analogy makes much sense.. just using it in a different way here) feels the things his company is doing is ethically wrong and he quits? Does this stop things from happening? Of fucking course not. A new CEO will be installed and almost precisely the same things will keep on happening. Rinse and repeat. Didn't we all wonder how Obama got the peace nobel prize whilst drone strikes were ever increasing? Didnt Obama have the nimbus of a more peacefully minded Potus? I mean.. am I saying a POTUS has no power in deciding things what so ever? Of course not. But you guys cant truly think that when the different entities are set for certain goals/plans the POTUS can stop these things. Like just look at the history. Even the presidents who actively tried to stop certain things (JFK and Vietnam comes to mind) simply failed in the grand scheme of things.. or were unfortunately replaced by a new potus who was willing to do what the industrial military complex and whatever other entities wanted. I can't possibly be alone in thinking that system/s > individual/s I don't think JFK tried very hard to leave Vietnam... seeing as in the 3 years he was president, the troops (sorry, military advisors) escalated massively from a few hundred to over 10k. Sure, he was no doubt pressured by generals, and ambassadors, and other long-term civil servants to do so, but if he was dedicated to peace, he could have just said "fuck it, let the commies have it" and refused to sign any EOs that expanded the military presence there. In JFK's case it was particularly up to him, because Congress did not get involved until 1964, when JFK had already been assassinated! Similarly, pointing to JFK as an impotent president seems incredibly idiotic given his involvement in (1) ramping up the space race, and (2) his role in the Cuban missile crisis. It's worth noting that trying to cast JFK as a peacenik seems deluded seeing as he was also the president during the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba. He may have talked a big talk about peace, but he was far from peaceful. And I really don't think it was because the gears of war ground on and he couldn't get off. Similarly for Obama. He won the Nobel prize for peace before he was even president. It wasn't despite his policy of droning the crap out of the Middle East, it was because it was a deluded "hope" that he wouldn't do so after 8 years of Dubya. Obama was in that sense similar to Kennedy: an extremely eloquent statesman, but definitely not afraid to get his hands dirty. He took both of Dubya's failing military operations and doubled down on them. I don't think either of these examples show that the POTUS has no power, but rather that the POTUS doesn't have the power to shape reality to his every desire. Unsurprisingly, the POTUS only has direct power over the US side. He can't just decide that the Vietcong or Taliban will behave themselves right now. And when confronted with a failing mission, they can either pull out and accept the loss, or follow the generals' advice on how to turn it into a win. Neither JFK nor Obama were willing to inherit the mission and take the loss. E: oh, and with all that I forgot to answer your actual question. A CEO thinking his company is doing something unethical and quitting over it, would be idiotic. It's his job to change that. If the shareholders don't want the unethical thing to stop, they can then remove the CEO, but if the CEO thinks his company is doing something unethical, his respons would only be "fuck it, I quit" if he were a terrible CEO. His response should be: "okay, quit doing this!" If the response is "we can't do that without going bankrupt", then the response should be "okay, give me a plan by which we can stop doing this without going bankrupt within N years". And similarly it is an unerasable blemish on Obama's record as president that despite 8 years he was unable to shut down Guantanamo. | ||
DarkPlasmaBall
United States43447 Posts
On February 19 2024 00:10 FriedrichNietzsche wrote: The dumber (more senile to an extent) the president/s get the more I think we have to come to the conclusion their importance is very very small compared to bascially so many other things/institutions/entities/(even) individuals.. I cant really come to any better conclusion.. Could you specify some examples of "things" or "individuals" that the president's importance is comparatively "very very small" to? The president creates executive orders, is the commander-in-chief, appoints Supreme Court justices, and forms a Cabinet that leads important federal departments. The president and the executive branch are, of course, checked and balanced by the legislative and judicial branches of government, but I'm interpreting your post to mean that the president has very little impact on the country, which is usually not true. All the recent presidents (Biden, Trump, Obama, GWB) were extremely influential. | ||
FriedrichNietzsche
92 Posts
On February 19 2024 06:22 Acrofales wrote: I don't think JFK tried very hard to leave Vietnam... seeing as in the 3 years he was president, the troops (sorry, military advisors) escalated massively from a few hundred to over 10k. Sure, he was no doubt pressured by generals, and ambassadors, and other long-term civil servants to do so, but if he was dedicated to peace, he could have just said "fuck it, let the commies have it" and refused to sign any EOs that expanded the military presence there. In JFK's case it was particularly up to him, because Congress did not get involved until 1964, when JFK had already been assassinated! Similarly, pointing to JFK as an impotent president seems incredibly idiotic given his involvement in (1) ramping up the space race, and (2) his role in the Cuban missile crisis. It's worth noting that trying to cast JFK as a peacenik seems deluded seeing as he was also the president during the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba. He may have talked a big talk about peace, but he was far from peaceful. And I really don't think it was because the gears of war ground on and he couldn't get off. Similarly for Obama. He won the Nobel prize for peace before he was even president. It wasn't despite his policy of droning the crap out of the Middle East, it was because it was a deluded "hope" that he wouldn't do so after 8 years of Dubya. Obama was in that sense similar to Kennedy: an extremely eloquent statesman, but definitely not afraid to get his hands dirty. He took both of Dubya's failing military operations and doubled down on them. I don't think either of these examples show that the POTUS has no power, but rather that the POTUS doesn't have the power to shape reality to his every desire. Unsurprisingly, the POTUS only has direct power over the US side. He can't just decide that the Vietcong or Taliban will behave themselves right now. And when confronted with a failing mission, they can either pull out and accept the loss, or follow the generals' advice on how to turn it into a win. Neither JFK nor Obama were willing to inherit the mission and take the loss. E: oh, and with all that I forgot to answer your actual question. A CEO thinking his company is doing something unethical and quitting over it, would be idiotic. It's his job to change that. If the shareholders don't want the unethical thing to stop, they can then remove the CEO, but if the CEO thinks his company is doing something unethical, his respons would only be "fuck it, I quit" if he were a terrible CEO. His response should be: "okay, quit doing this!" If the response is "we can't do that without going bankrupt", then the response should be "okay, give me a plan by which we can stop doing this without going bankrupt within N years". And similarly it is an unerasable blemish on Obama's record as president that despite 8 years he was unable to shut down Guantanamo. 1) Unless you have been a fly on the wall during this time you can't know what his individual stance was on Vietnam & what he and all the other individuals and entities thought & or wanted. Now I will admit it is quite some time ago I looked into this so I might be wrong. But iirc JFK wanted to decrease war efforts vs Vietnam. If this is the case it exactly proves my point. 2) I never said that the POTUS has no power. 3) The CEO COMPANY thing: You are just wrong. If the main goals of the company are unethical it is basically impossible for a CEO to change these. It is a bit like thinking/saying "Hey so u are the CEO at Heckler & Koch and you realize what your company is doing is unethical.. lets push for not producing weapons any more but candy".. that will hardly work. No.. u will be ousted or go away on your own volition and you will be replaced by someone who will keep on doing the main thing the company is intended to do: produce guns/weapons.. The Obama thing once again is a statement supporting my viewpoint: The President has an extremely hard time to change things (especially if powerful entities started them and if resources are bound there).. What am I missing? Maybe I'll even retract my statement that the POTUS is less powerful than other entities.. But if you consider the POTUS being one entity and like 100 to thousand other important and influencial entities existing in the USA .. I think it just follows that the POTUS can not by most measures be more powerful than these (sometimes partly combined) entities.. I feel like u want to disagree but what you are writing at least in part proves my point. | ||
FriedrichNietzsche
92 Posts
On February 19 2024 06:24 DarkPlasmaBall wrote: Could you specify some examples of "things" or "individuals" that the president's importance is comparatively "very very small" to? The president creates executive orders, is the commander-in-chief, appoints Supreme Court justices, and forms a Cabinet that leads important federal departments. The president and the executive branch are, of course, checked and balanced by the legislative and judicial branches of government, but I'm interpreting your post to mean that the president has very little impact on the country, which is usually not true. All the recent presidents (Biden, Trump, Obama, GWB) were extremely influential. I would retract that statement. I think it is a slight exaggeration. However I will stand by the following "considering the POTUS is 1 entity and there are 100 to 1000 (or more) very influential and powerful entities (actually it might be insanely more compliacted than just this number.. entities can be companies, individuals, institutions and many more different things) I do think the POTUS has less power than these entities (maybe not 1v1s but certainly 1vs10 1v100 or let alone 1vs>100)" | ||
Acrofales
Spain17700 Posts
If the past teaches us anything, it is that trying to hold on to systems and policies that refuse to appropriately adapt and respond to changing circumstances — like climate change or growing unrest among a population – usually end in disaster. Those with the means and opportunity to enact change must do so, or at least to not stand in the way when reform is needed. This last lesson is a particularly hard one to learn. Unfortunately, there are many signs around the world today that the mistakes of the past are being repeated, especially by our political leaders and those aspiring to hold power. Unfortunately, cliohistorians aren't quite as advanced as Foundation's psychohistorian. Or maybe they are, and New Zealand is their Terminus?! | ||
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