I would be too, but I really don't know how we go about deradicalizing and deprogramming this set (other than my usual 'it's a generational issue' spiel, which it is, but, y'know, we have to survive long enough to work on that timescale).Broomstick wrote: ↑2021-01-15 05:31pm I'm all for trying it, I just doubt that it would work on someone with decades of entrenched thought-patterns and a delusion that he is always right. If you can prove me wrong I'd be delighted.
And these consequences should involve suffering?Knife wrote: ↑2021-01-15 11:59am
Consequences. Our system is broken, we can agree with that. But we've also see, in horror, what happens if it fails completely with no good alternative being worked on. If people don't face consequences for further breaking the State in such a way as to flirt with fascism and loot the State, then the next set who may or may not be smarter, will have an easier job of it.
So, spite. Fair enough, I can get behind a good bit of spite - but there is a difference between the goal of denying him fame and wanting him to suffer.
Trump acted in that way because it was true. In what way does desiring his suffering serve to address this issue?Partially, it's to send a message.
For the term of his presidency, and for who knows how long before that, Trump has acted as if the law didn't apply to him.
That not only was he above it, that he in fact was the law.
He's encouraged some of the most vile behavour in people, and causes a resurgence in groups that promote that kind of behavior.
And restoring hope to the people requires suffering and a slow, miserable death?This has caused alot of people to lose hope.
By holding him fully accountable for everything it's been proven he's done or encouraged, you may restore hope to those people. You begin the process of cleaning up Trumps garbage, and show that no one is above the law. That people can be held for their actions. That wealth and power are only a delay.
So, his slow, miserable death in prison is justice? Can you define justice for me?Trump may not be the only symptom of the kind of corruption he represents, but someone of his stature, his profile, facing justice, that's a big step in starting on getting that corruption cleaned up.
Trump is my enemy, and I'm not an American either. He has negatively impacted people I know too, and as you say, the entire world. That makes him my enemy. But it does not necessarily follow from that fact that he 'deserves punishment.' The urge to punish and the urge to see justice done are only compatible if we accept retribution as a legitimate goal of justice (and admittedly sometimes it can be - particularly in IHL matters - but even there it is a very bitter pill to swallow), and I remain unconvinced that the desire to see him suffer a slow, miserable death is anything other than the desire for raw vengeance.Trump is not my enemy. (Hell, I'm Canadian. Trump is a bad joke up here).
Trump is, however, someone that has negatively impacted people I know, people I care about, and indeed, the entire world.
He deserves punishment, and I think the world needs to see that his crap is not, will not, and should not be tolerated.
As previously mentioned, it's very hard to actually create a deterrence effect when it comes to national leadership, and I'm confused now. You expressly name deterrence as a factor in the first part here, but then say that 'justice' - by which I assume you mean 'Trump dying in a place he hates after a long misery' - will not achieve it. Is it your intent to argue that vengeance in and of itself is a social good necessary to create the conditions for public safety/deterrence/'any [other] improvements'?And it needs to be done in such a way, that the people with the resources to try to do what Trump has done, at any level, stop and reconsider it, and hopefully decide to do something actually useful and productive for society and the world at large.
Will public safety, deterrence, or any improvements be immediately achieved by him facing justice? No.
But it's a damn good start.
Because, once again - just to be crystal clear - it is the glee at the prospect of his prolonged suffering that I am questioning, not whether there is a legitimate case to imprison him on public safety/deterrence grounds. What does his suffering add to the deterrence or public safety grounds?
The staggering number of people who think the attack on the capitol was antifa is really cementing it, too. We've known for some time Americans were unmoored and utterly propagandized, but witnessing in real time an organic, self-generated 'we have always been at war with eastasia' moment unfold over just a few hours made the sheer extent to which it has been internalized undeniable.Batman wrote: ↑2021-01-15 07:12pm Indeed. Whether literally insane or not, Trump's election and especially his actions once in office and the fact that there were many americans who insisted he was actually doing a good job (not to mention the failed insurrection) shot any credibility America may have had left.