Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Wed Apr 23, 2025 4:33 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Apr 23, 2025 3:35 pm
I find it fascinating that the Lefties always want to complain about "process" things, but not about truth or results. Here's another example: they complain elaborately that government cuts are being done the wrong way...by which, it seems, they're not meaning inefficiently, not unjustly, and not without quite clear justification, but just...impolitely or not-nicely, in some vague sense. And this, they hope to ramp up to some sort of allegation of extremism. But what they do not dare to contest is the important issue: whether or not the graft, inefficiency and outright theft of public funds that has been the rule on Washington was actually going on. The evidence is far too elaborate that it has been, and to the tune of billions and billions of taxpayer dollars.
Here is my own report -- about my own perspectives -- on just about everything the new administration is doing:
I have no idea what, or who, to trust. I read or watch much doom & gloom reporting from tariffs to deportations. But I also read or watch the other side. It is very hard to feel one is getting "accurate information".
Agreed. The mainline press is partisan now, and the internet sources are of variable quality.
This fits in with a time of dramatic change, power-battles, narrative spin, and information warfare.
Decidedly so.
In my own case my hope is: That the US stabilizes itself as the global hegemon. I follow Meershiemer in holding to a political realism stance. Far better that the US dominates, even if there is injustice and corruption, than China. Put another way it is better for China to be taken down a number of notches. If it does happen that "industry is returned to the US" I am all for it.
It is a simple formula. But it is the one that makes sense (from a perspective of political realism).
We agree on that, too.
Unfortunately, the struggles between the forces of convention (the present power-system) and the more radical Left/Progressive Neo-Communist forces (I regard this faction as real) will not abate. The power struggle within the US will go on. And I do not think that things will settle down (culturally, socially, emotionally).
I agree, but with one caution: there is such a thing as "the fallacy of the middle way," which is the error of supposing that the right answer always has to lie between extremes, right in the middle position. This is sometimes the right call, but sometimes not: what, for example, is the "middle way" on genocide or Southern slavery? Not something good, right?
In the present case, I agree with you that there are two extremes. However, the differences are notable, and
willingness to debate is one of them. The Left, in general, does not discuss: it shuts down, insults, censors, bullies, silences, deplatforms, stereotypes its enemies, and regards discussion as a form of collusion. A recent example of this has been furnished by Bill Maher's conversation with Trump: Maher (of whom I am no fan) has been criticized, insulted, called a 'traitor' and a 'compromiser' for even having gone to meet with Trump. Maher didn't like everything about Trump, and has been a long-time Trump critic: but this did no save him from being excoriated by the Left for even having had a conversation with "the enemy." How is discourse supposed to develop, though, if you insist on regarding your adversary as so beyond the pale that even to speak to him or listen to him is indicted as evil?
By contrast, you can find multiple cases of Leftists going to rallies on the moderate right, fully expecting to be shut down, insulted, and bullied..and finding that their opponents simply agreed to disagree, but let them talk, and even treated them well. This has produced a "walk-away" movement from the Left, in some cases, because the stereotype of the other side simply did not pan out. It turns out that refusing to discuss isn't a signal of high moral courage, but rather a craven tactic of those who fear their position is vulnerable, or who have been indoctrinated to project Leftist behaviours and motives onto people whose motives are not the same as the Left. You don't find calls for silencing, deplatforming and whatnot on the Right these days; you find a lot of advocacy for open debate and controversy, though.
The reasons for the difference are, of course, ideological: the moderate right and centrists on the left tend to see debate as a means to progress and negotiation, and reason as an ally. The Left sees the political scene as a gnostic struggle of the enlightened against the benighted, in a scene they view as inevitably conflictual, inauthentic, and characterized by Foucaultian or Nietzschean power-grabs, not by a search for truth. So the only way to play the game is to "shut down" the power-grabs (they attribute to) the other side. Content, reason and logic, in this way of thinking, are not neutral tools of thought available to both sides equitably, but rather "artifacts" of "patriarchy," or "whiteness" or "the establishment," or "privilege," tools which they think it's better to drop than to use, especially since the application of such things as reason, logic and debate tend not to end up promoting the ideological agenda of the Left.
Additionally, I look forward to the day when Donald Trump has reached his 'expire' date and when he is no longer part of the political landscape. I have said that I support a newer Republican Party and (naturally) many of its conservative objectives. I hope that other and far less controversial figures replace him.
Well, I'm not in the Trump camp myself, and right now, he's being pretty hard on my country. I hope we can survive it, but there's a real danger we won't. At the same time, in a spirit of fairness, I have to recognize that there are some really outstandingly promising things
for America he's at least self-presenting as doing right now, things that just might save his country from ruin, if the time is not too late already.
Cutting the bureaucrats is one of them. If that is not done, countries will simply go bankrupt, due to the graft, incompetence and corruption that is so rife in our governments. The ordinary, hard-working American taxpayer does not deserve to find himself or herself funding people who do nothing, or send their money to absurd causes like free condoms for Gazans, gay theatre in Ireland, or trans-surgeries in Guatemala -- all real examples of what was going on. Americans deserve good roads, clean water, better schools, safer streets, a properly-supplied civil defense, secure borders, better medical systems...THESE are what their tax dollars should be going to. And I hope, for America's sake, that that is what ensues when the cuts to the civil service are complete. But it's definitely needed to happen; and if a DT is what was needed to shock the system into fiscal responsibility, then I'd be glad for that, for the sake of the Americans. I have no desire to see the US go down. The world still needs an America, even if she's in pretty rough shape at the moment.