K. A. Pital wrote:The constitution of Stalinist Russia was very advanced for its time. Idiots who blindly worship a piece of paper do not even understand that more often than not, it is not the document itself but the way legal norms are treated by the government is what matters.
Yes. And
given that this is true, which of the following is a better attitude to take towards rights outlined in a constitution:
A) "If our national constitution grants a right, the citizens should have that right, and we should not try to subvert that right unless we have wide popular support that permits us to
actually change the constitution"
OR
B) "Frankly, I don't care what the constitution says, I think it would be good policy to do X, so it doesn't matter if legally people have a right which would be infringed on by doing X. There's a way to amend the constitution, so it really doesn't matter what the constitution says, even if I have nowhere near enough support to get it changed
on this issue."
I don't know about you, but (A) seems a lot less likely to create a situation like Stalinist Russia than (B) does. It is much easier to make sure you keep a democracy when
all constitutional rights are taken seriously. And much harder once you concede that the state is allowed to pick and choose which constitutional rights it's going to forget about based on 'practical considerations.'
Other than that, yes, many first world nations do exceptionally well without the US constitution.
The US is the closest to a Third World shithole among developed nations, the Sick Man of the First World. And frankly, it should be like this. When you blindly worship a republic founded by fucking slavers and built on relentless genocide, expulsion and extermination of the natives, half of which was a slavocracy untl the mid-XIX century, a republic of rich white fucktards, if you glorify its bloody foundations - you fully deserve all the mockery you get for clinging to a piece of paper written by some old bastards nobody across both oceans even cares about.
Do you even comprehend the idea that people who happen to live in the US might actually care about enforcing constitutional rights
without "blindly worshipping" anything about their country? Are you actually listening to anything here except the strawman in your head?
Because if you can't tell the difference between "thinks it's a good idea to NOT selectively ignore the rights of their citizens as defined in the only legal document that actually does so" and "blindly worships a bunch of old bastards and their piece of paper..."
You have become an unworthy excuse for a political commentator.
Maybe gun control is not worth it. But in the US, nothing is worth it. There is no control over guns, neither over corporations. Or over its own government that kills people on secret lists and black-bags folks to Gitmo after extralegal "talks" like fucking mafiosis do. In the US, labour laws are shit, environmental protection standards are ridiculous. And people are obsessed with their guns. Sounds like a nightmarish place, sounds like the nation can't advance at all. It was bad when I visited it, and it remains every bit as bad as it was.
The solution to this problem is
more rights, not less. It is
more enforcement of existing rights, not less. Stepping back from "we take the constitution seriously" is one of the ways America got into this mess, and doing it harder will not get us out of this mess.
And quite sincerely- there is a noticeable slice of the American population who consider all claims by the left to respect the constitution to be a farce precisely because of the gun rights issue, and as a result ignore the left when it protests that other important rights are being neglected. And those people do have votes, even if you disagree with them.
Pressing for gun control and saying "frankly I don't care if that's a constitutional right" have
actively weakened our nation's ability to enforce or honor other constitutional rights.
How does it happen that other people get to enjoy free speech without worshipping the US constitution? Maybe it is because the have a different constitution that is superior? Hah.
How will selectively ignoring the constitution we have automatically lead to a better one?
Are you familiar with the idea of 'precedent?'