Oh I see. Because I think that government has a role in our lives I must be a left wing, pink-o, commie lover.
son of Ishmael wrote:Droopy wrote:
That's hardly an answer to my question. In fact, this idea has been a staple among the western Left since Krushev's revelations about Stalin's crimes, and the idea of "neo-communism" was born.
It was also common among the American leftist intelligentsia in the 1930s in explaining known atrocities under way in the Soviet Union (when they were not simply dismissed as pure fabrication by the capitalist exploiters.
What the hell are you talking about?
He's talking about what he wants to talk about, as is his right, and for Droopy/Coggins it has never mattered very much whether anybody feels it is worth while listening. He basically has certain topics that he really wants to post about (in this case, the denial of Stalin's evil acts by non-Trotkyist leftists at the time they took place), and he will get there by hook or by crook. See the case of Mr Dick and
King Charles's Head.
It might be interesting one day to have a discussion on the following basis:
1. All but a tiny minority of people agree that the government has some legitimate role in exerting power over its citizens.
2. In a functioning democracy, it is ultimately down to the citizens, acting through their deliberative elected bodies, to decide what that role should be. Otherwise, it is not a functioning democracy.
3. Most advanced democracies have evolved systems that limit the power of those deliberative bodies to make radical changes to accepted limits of government power, so as to avoid "tyranny of the majority". In the USA, that role is played by the Constitution and the mechanisms for giving effect to it such as the Supreme Court. But given a wide enough consensus, the Constitution itself can be changed. If it could not, the USA would not be a democracy.
4. So given those rights and those constraints, what roles do the citizens think the government could play that would be most conducive to their long-term interests, which would naturally include maintaining the health of their democratic system?
I don't think there can be any a priori answers to such questions: they are questions of practical judgement. I have the impression that for Droopy however there are some a priori answers: no government role that he conceives to be incompatible with the teachings of the CoJCoLDS can ever be legitimate.
That's fine by me though. Droopy gets to vote and to advocate his views - but so do all the people who think differently. And there are probably a lot more of them than there are Droopy sympathizers.