In contrast, acting to subvert faith in/circumvent the legal means of transferring power is not only breaking the rules of the system, it threatens to undermine the whole thing.
I don't think it was their intention to be that destructive. It's still extremely destructive anyway. If we were in a better political climate, I absolutely would be considering not voting Trump because of it, but there's so much that's unconscionable within the Democratic party that it's still worth voting for him anyway.
In any case, the Democrats are threatening to undermine the whole thing. The No Kings Act is quite radical, and, if implemented and upheld (It has over 30 cosponsors!), would be retaliated against and copycatted with regard to every topic imaginable, destroying the independence of the federal judiciary. They're also proposing term limits plans, which, once passed, after the retirement part is struck down as unconstitutional, are just court packing. These are not good, and are absolutely examples of your final sentence.
This is especially bad, because the federal judiciary is the only branch that cares to any significant extent about constitutional limits, and I like having the bill of rights mean something, and protect against a tyranny-inclined majority (this is the whole principle of your argument, right?).
What do you make of Senator Whitehouse saying that they'd pass the reforms that, bundled in a single bill with a bunch of other popular things, to only circumvent the filibuster once? That they would be "virtually certain" to pass such a bill, and that it would have "spectacular tailwinds"? Is he lying, or wrong?
I don't expect Republicans would overplay their hand with replacing Democratic judges, because of what the situation is like right now—if they could get a sufficiently strong commitment to not blow up the whole thing in the future in exchange for replacing the justice with another Democrat, that seems well worth taking. (Though I could certainly see them replacing some of Thomas, Alito, or Roberts, with other conservatives.) I could be wrong; it's possible they have no self-control.
I think immigration can be done with more direct action, so congressional actors are of a little less importance.
I'm similarly uncertain on foreign policy. In practice, it looks like Trump's foreign policy worked out a lot better than Biden's (see: Afghanistan, Abraham Accords, Ukraine, Iran), which is a point in Trump's favor, but I don't know how the amount of risk taken compares. Are you opposed to people using strategic ambiguity?
I've yet to see anyone commit that they won't. It's worth noting that term limits is a popular and moderate-sounding proposal, and the no kings act has the advantage of being against an unpopular, and extreme-sounding SCOTUS decision.
In the Senate, Manchin and Sinema were the only ones who cared about the filibuster. They'll be gone.
The list of D-affiliated senators who did not cosponsor the No Kings Act are: Senator Sinema, Senator Bennett, Senator Murphy, Senator Ossoff, Senator Tester, Senator Cortez Masto, Senator Rosen, Senator Hassan, Senator Menendez, Senator Brown, Senator Fetterman, Senator Warner, Senator Kaine, Senator Cantwell, and Senator Manchin.
The most likely set of seat changes, should the democrats win the senate, are Sinema->Gallego, Cardin->Alsobrooks, Stabenow->Slotkin, Manchin->Justice, Butler->Schiff, Carper->Rochester, Menendez->Kim.
That means they would still need to convince all of: Bennett, Murphy, Ossoff, Tester, Cortez Masto, Rosen, Hassan, Brown, Fetterman, Warner, Kaine, Cantwell, Gallego, Alsobrooks, Slotkin, Schiff, Rochester, and Kim. 18 Senators. Schiff's literally running on court packing. Alsobrooks spoke in favor of the Biden "reforms." Kim and Rochester are members of the house progressive caucus, as was Gallego before he had to pretend to be moderate, so moderation should not be our expectation. Slotkin's said she'd be open to term limits. So that's all the new members.
If anyone votes it down, I think it would be one of the current members. These are not as strong, as evidence, but Cantwell, Rosen, and Cortez Masto all cosponsored a bill to propose a constitutional amendment saying that Presidents have no immunity for actions, and generally applicable laws should be ordinarily read as applying to Presidents. Most of the rest supported ethics code things, but I don't really think that's weighty evidence.
Senator Whitehouse recently said that the "reforms" would in all likelihood be bundled in a package containing everything else they really want (e.g. making abortion legal everywhere), so that they only have to bypass a filibuster once. He says that would have "spectacular tailwinds," and that they'd be "virtually certain." It's possible that he's lying or wrong, but I'd expect he'd understand the environment better than I would.
I'm unhappy with both candidates' "policy platforms," but in the end neither will be enacted to a meaningful extent.
Are you sure about that? The chance of a trifecta, provided a Harris victory takes place, is about 50%, per the betting markets, I believe. That's high! They might not be able to get some of the price controls stuff through, but if they get 50%+1 in each house, they absolutely will enact "court reforms" (term limits, which are really court packing; the No Kings Act, which is really a way to force the judiciary to stop taking positions one dislikes, constitution be damned) that have popular sounding names and high esteem among democrats (so they'll pass), but have the long-run effect of destroying the independence of the federal judiciary and our system of government. Also, no way they crack down on the border, which will over time, as those here illegally get citizenship, push the country farther left, and get you some more of those policies you don't like.
The wing of the libertarian party that's closer to the conservatives doesn't like their nominee, I think.
How do you justify this, given that you find the majority of her policy positions abhorrent?
Would you then say that what's complaint-worthy is not the deception, but that it evinces a lack of concern for details? That is, there's a problem, but the problem isn't that it's lying?
SCOTUS was expected to say as much in Moore v. United States this year. They avoided doing so outright (though the concurrence and dissent, between them four members of the court, did), but were warning enough that I can't see Kavanaugh and Roberts allowing it.
there is certainly a negative return because your success attracts some bellend to come and take it.
While I think this may often have been true, I don't know that that was always the case. Usually emperors wanted functioning empires, for example, which upholding property rights is helpful towards. But social pressure would have been common, of course.
Comparing wealth between times is hard to do with a consistent unit.
Reddit is still more male coded but I have a vague sense it's become more gender neutral over the years.
It looks like it's 62-38. That does seem to be lower than in the past, after looking it up.
I propose a flat rate of $100,000 per green card. Why wouldn't this work?
Why not auctions? Then you can fix the number of people (what a lot of people care about more), and get more money. 100,000 is too low, anyway.
I'm not sure, though, what I think of changing immigration to only be the wealthy—immigrants stereotypically do a lot of the landscaping and such currently.
I'm in favor of some sort of changes to our current system. Our current way, where companies game the lotteries, and where it's often better to come in illegally and then go for citizenship, is not ideal.
I read an essay somewhere talking about how suspicion and hatred of the rich was totally reasonable up until about the last 200 years. Rich people were noblemen (descended from those who conquered lands and secured rents) or schemers who'd found some way to secure the bag in a zero-sum universe. You didn't make money, you took money.
This surely can't be entirely true. It would be quite surprising if there were zero or negative returns to ingenuity and assiduousness.
I could certainly believe that that was often the case, though.
Okay, so what does solve the allais paradox mean in this case? What's the benefit of this? Am I right in reading you as saying that it continues to be the case that agents violate the axioms of expected utility in the Allais case, but that you can still use those preferences and transform them into a non-violating utility function that uses the agent's preferences to make it, but is not actually representative of the agent?
I think some of this is also that you didn't really give a thorough explanation, but just an overview. At least, that's what's going on in my case. I'd otherwise be pretty interested.
Covering women's areolas and nipples has been used as a work around for women going topless, leading me to believe those are the areas of primary concern when people talk about bras and modesty.
Perhaps others will disagree, but I'm not actually convinced that that's true. I think it might be more of people having modesty norms that allow for part of the breasts to be uncovered, and that's the easiest way to draw a line, rather than being what is relevant in itself.
I don't really have opinions on what effect bras have on modesty.
What does Amerikaner mean?
The 17th amendment, and the turn to the popular vote for president, were mistakes.
Somehow Harris has a degree in economics, and, as an undergrad, chaired the college's economics society (per wikipedia)?
We really need to teach all this in schools. Sure, two thirds of the people will forget it all, but it would be really useful if that additional third of people exists.
Waymo exists, and Tesla's tech is pretty advanced, I believe. I wonder how much of why we haven't seen it much yet is fear of heavy lawsuits and regulation.
I wonder how this will interact with population effects. Birth rates are below replacement and falling (though thankfully not as much as in some other places), which if that were the only effect, would mean that demand for residential housing should be decreasing. That hasn't been happening, because of other factors: increasing lifespans, a lower person:household ratio, and immigration. But we shouldn't expect that to continue, except maybe immigration—otherwise housing values will start falling as the population declines. So we can't expect houses to be a permanently appreciating asset (adjusting for inflation), without changes to society, or immigration.
Is there a longer take or paper on this that I can read?
I mostly have hope in the legal structure and republican opposition stopping the craziest parts of this slide into a leftist dystopia. Of course they have to spend political effort and will to stop these things, and while they are busy stopping things from getting worse things certainly aren't going to get better.
26% chance of a dem trifecta following this election. Let's hope Sheehy pulls through in Montana.
This seems pretty reasonable.
Do you feel similarly about all the slander against Justice Thomas?
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