Some Schmo wrote: ↑Wed May 13, 2026 6:30 pm
Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Wed May 13, 2026 6:04 pm
I don't think that fixing what's broken is the best goal. We have to, forgive the irony, build back better.
This has been Buttigieg's message recently, and I agree. I'm just not sure we can improve on what we have without stabilizing it first. How do we restore faith in our institutions? How do we trust Supreme Court again? Or Congress? Or the accuracy of elections?
Part of the problem is that nobody can trust the GOP, and they have no interest in fixing themselves (let alone try to improve).
I don't know. The problems are obviously bigger than I am.
We made a fundamental mistake. We built institutions and guardrails, thinking they were strong and they would protect us. We had it backwards. Guardrails don't hold themselves up -- we have to hold them up. Our institutions mostly work, but they are fragile and need us to protect them. We got lazy and relied on guardrails and institutions instead of defending them.
Going forward is too big for one person. It's not too big for us together. But it will take work and probably sacrifice. If we can't rely on our election systems, we have to protect their reliability. We have to do what right-wingers have, so far, kicked our asses at: taking over local, county and state government. We need to control the election machinery top to bottom. Then we have to run fair elections.
We failed to protect the Supreme Court from corruption. When Trump nominates syncophatic replacements for Alito and Thomas (who most certainly will resign this presidential term), we have to raise holy hell. Put several million people on the streets of Washington D.C. Shut the City down. If necessary, national strike. Let those on the right wing know that we will not accept permanent minority rule. And we have to press Congress to enact and enforce a code of ethics for the Supreme Court.
Or pick the fight now over voting rights and gerrymandering. We don't have to put up with needing to win a national election by 4% in order to have a majority in Congress. Put a million people on the streets in the capitals of states that are whitewashing their voting districts.
There are more of us than there are of them. That's why they a gerrymandering so hard. That's why they try to make it harder for people they think won't vote for them to vote. There are a ton of grass roots organizations that are organizing with a long term goal of using people power to turn things around. Find one and get involved. One thing is for sure -- if we rely on other people to fix this, it will never get fixed.