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Notes -
I mean the whole thing is built on several flimsy houses of cards, but one I’d like to highlight specifically is a latent assumption that you can have a violent uprising with no other ill effects, perhaps comparable to an election. This could not be more false. The way the modern world currently works is that massive violent campaigns are quite often strongly net-negative for everyone. They have a long lasting negative impact on not just stability (tautological as it may be) but also economic prosperity and the medium term ability to self-govern effectively. And probably more. And no one is actually (so far) actually doing so poorly that this would be a good trade. Instead, the social contract and notion of a nation of rules and laws is a mutually beneficial one in a classic political science sense as well as a literal and practical sense.
Um, he did address that.
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