michaelarmand wrote:
My whole point is, the constitution was written by some smart folks escaping tyranny. Their primary intent was to limit the power of the federal government. We have completely lost sight of this.
yeah. let's make sure we keep our eye on the prize:
bending the present around cutting edge geopolitics from the mid-1700s.
it's tempting to leave you with a one-liner, but i think it might be productive to recap your "whole point".
1) "constitution written by smart folks." i guess. i mean, yes, we know definitively they could read and write. and we might assume - given they all had a role in government - they were all quite brilliant (because this is a trans-historical axiom). either way, their intellectual prowess says nothing about the purchase of their thought on the present. why? because their "smarts" were set in a particular historical moment, and the problems facing white wealthy men in 1770 are FAR different than those facing modern leaders. to suggest they "onsighted" the complex quandaries of the 21st century is laughable at best.
2) "escaping tyranny": i find it hilarious that people don't trust the vile self-serving ethos of modern government officials, but believe the first set of politicians in this country were altruistic saints. nope. powerful white men who didn't want to pay taxes to a far away government. did they do away with taxes? no. did they do away with government? no. did they abolish slavery? no.
they changed the way power operated in and through nation states, and they changed the locus of sovereignty. but they still maintained a strand of "tyranny" under the guise of a republic; a new type of tyranny with an emphasis on diffusion rather than centrality. different but not "free" in any meaningful way.
3) "primary intent": we're going to make claims about original intent? here? really?
4) "we have completely lost sight of this": of course, by "this" you are referring to an ostensible intentionality, which can only be verified if we have access to a time machine. we don't have one, and yet you still insist on lamenting our failure to stick to a plan made invisible by the passage of time? in sum, you are suggesting we should try to steer the course of a nation with an unclear mandate written 200 years prior to the problems we are trying to solve.
great job. i'll be in the war room reading Euripedes to prepare for the ground war with China.
-t
haunted.