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This is core to the progressive playbook.
Simplified American democracy can be thought of as "You think A, I think B - let's vote on it." Our dispute resolution mechanism is voting plus individual level protections (the constitution) and then courts for reviewing the decision even after its made. Throw on top a lot of procedural shenanigans as a mechanism to slow or disrupt a process, but not to truly alter the game. It gets down to voting, often multiple times over time.
The progressive playbook is "Let's not vote on this." Instead, it's "Let's shoehorn this into something we've already voted on and, simultaneously, push a narrative than any disagreement with subject X is actually a disagreement with already universally agreed upon subject Y (ie that thing on which we've already voted)" Primarily this takes the form of injecting everything into the 1964 Civil Rights acts (or one of its many updates over the decades). Why? Because no one is going to come out and say "I'm against civil rights." All the progressives have to do is say "everything is civil rights" which they do routinely.
And this, as you state, is exactly why WPATH has tried to science-ify and launder what is actually a very niche ideological debate. If "science" says all of this trans stuff is "healthcare" then they can make the argument "this is about healthcare, not about out trans stuff" while simultaneously making outrageous claims like "people against us want to hurt children."
This is also how "abortion" is no longer primarily about "killing babies vs not killing babies" but about drafting off of 1960s-1970s era women's rights ("her body, her choice") and (again) healthcare infused "reproductive health."
And this is what truly disturbs those on the right about progressives. It isn't the issue / ideology stuff - you can have crazy ideas all you want, and you can have them away from me. If enough people really do agree with you, we can all vote on it. But when you keep hacking and re-hacking the system to effectively circumvent all of the laws and norms that have been developed to deal with disagreement since the founding of the republic, it really doesn't look like you don't care about things like the constitution anymore - you just want to have it YOUR way, all others be literally damned and exiled. And it's stupid because all of those laws and norms are there for really good reasons like preventing tyranny and resisting highly emotional social movements. It's funny to me when I hear progressives say things like "Donald Trump will end democracy" because it demonstrates they don't really understand how the three branches of government work and interact. But, then again, if the institutions go the way the progressives want then, yes, a sufficiently motivated demagogue would have the instruments at hand to end democracy in America as we know it.
It has always been framed this way. Pro-choice advocates have been framing it mostly in terms of women's lib since they stopped framing it mostly in terms of eugenics. The emphasis on 'healthcare' has always been in the background, I think it's just increased progressive neuroticism that brought it to the fore.
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I think this glosses over a lot of what the limits of democratic control should be. This itself is a political choice - hairdressing is licensed in some jurisdictions, but not others. What sorts of trades a bank can make with its own book is a political question, and our current consensus developed post GFC which led to the Basel frameworks.
The populist theory appears to be that any change which is salient is grounds for the choice to be declared political and the subject of debate. This is self-fulfilling IMO, because nearly any issue can be made politically divise simply by inciting our leaders to act divisive about it. See: vaccines, plastic bags at grocers, transgender healthcare.
Our discourse is increasingly driven by crackpots and populists, and that's how you end up with the Phillipine Courts causing blindness in children.
The populist framing is going to do severe long term damage to our politics, our health, and our planet.
Retvrn to elite worship.
We're ..... already here.
No, it isn't elites in the sense of Aristocrats or Philosopher-Kings the way a lot of reactionaries would like. It's elites of culture - Hollywood, sports figures, quasi political public figures (talking heads), and pretty much anyone who can find a way to capture 1mm+ eyeballs one way or another.
Now, you might respond "No,no,no by elite I mean people with, you know, demonstrated skill and capability!" Well, it's turtles all the way down. One man's skill is another man's luck, just look at the recent thread on the stock market. Also, if you think the most meritocratic are the ones who naturally progress to the top of large organizations, I've got a Google and United States Army certified bridge to sell you.
The entire idea of "replace bad elites with good elites" fails because having any elites in the American system allows for co-opting of the system. Bernie Bro's will talk about the moneyed elite buying elections, MAGA types will talk about the Deep State bureaucracy elites stealing elections. They're both wrong in a factual sense (which is, you know, the most important one) but they're both leaning on an elite-vs-people ontology as the primary engine for deteriorating social and economic conditions. This is because it's such a simple and compelling narrative and has worked hundreds of times all of the world. "THEY are fucking you over!" Is politicking in a nutshell. There's a reason we call it Red Tribe vs Blue Tribe on this website.
Elites should be less socially relevant to people. I've written about this before but a huge part of Trumps appeal is that a lot of his base viscerally, deeply sees Trump as one of their own. They feel like they can reach out and touch him. Flashback to early in the 2016 election cycle and we were, then, headed towards Hillary Clinton vs Jeb Bush. That's an election that feels awful because neither candidate is
not a lizard person grown in the Epstein cyborg bunkerparticularly personable. But I wonder if it would've been one of the more substantive elections in recent history. "Hey, both of us have the personality of a damp phonebook ... I guess we to have to talk about the issues!" That turns into elites with high political / technical salience getting their shot at leadership, instead of those with high social salience. President Mitch McConnell? Never in today's world ... but I have a suspicion the Founding Fathers would've looked at him and said, "That's your fucking guy!""Elite worship" as you term it is a very fancy version of parasocial relationships with strangers. I can't think of an argument for why a deeply committed parasocial relationship is ever a good thing. Instead, strengthen actual in person social relationships. But at the level beyond your own family (which, for any healthy adult, will always be their number one social relationship). But don't extend it to strangers, which just turns into you creating conceptions of reality that already fit your pre-defined values system. I'd say, draw the demarcation point at people you see semi-regularly and know the names of. People who might greet you on the street. Put politicians right after those folks in terms of relative social importance. I want my relative prioritization of my relationship with Steve, the retired Army Colonel at my regular bar, to be far more important that my perceived relationship with Biden/Trump/Kevin Sorbo.
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I call first dibs on defining "elite".
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Reverse this and I think the populist position becomes a lot more compelling. In other words, deciding what to exclude from politics is a political choice. Taking an element of life and saying 'I don't care what any of you think, we're doing it this way and we always will' is pretty much the most direct exercise of power one can imagine.
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Huh? You think transgender health is divisive only because politicians acted divisive about it? I think that's a pretty bad example. If anything politicians are playing catchup with the popular sentiment, and the whole thing only ever became a topic in public debate, because the elites were working so relentlessly on imposing it on the public.
Or are saying the opposite, these issues wouldn't be divisive if people wouldn't feel divided about them, and incite politicians to act accordingly? Isn't that just a round about way of saying "the issue is, in fact, politically divisive"?
Who's elites, yours or mine?
If you think having a unified legitimate elite is such a great idea, why don't you reject yours and endorse mine as legitimate?
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