Edi wrote:The Romulan Republic wrote:So what do you suggest? Write off the US as irredeemably stupid and evil and stop trying to improve things so you can wallow in your cynicism and anti-American hostility? Yes, their are a lot of assholes with a lot of power, and a lot of ignorant people who go along with them, but honestly, what purpose does defeatism serve other than to let you pat yourself on the back for how smart you seem to think your cynicism makes you and how much better you are than those horrible Americans?
I'd rather act on the assumption that progress is possible than concede defeat to the radical Right or write off my entire country.
And if the situation was as hopeless as you think, Sanders wouldn't be capable of mounting a serious campaign. Their is a left wing opposition in America that is not particularly hawkish or anti-Muslim, and I would argue that it has been stronger of late, in some respects at least, than it has been for much of recent history. Because I sure as hell don't recall an openly socialist candidate who is a real primary contender before. Not that I'm suggesting that everything hinges on one man. Its just an example I find useful.
I'm not saying you should write off your entire country, but what the more liberal folks in the US need to do is actually grow a spine and confront the right wing instead of toothlessly standing by and wringing their hands.
Some of us have.
I consider Sanders' campaign very significant partly because it shows that their is now a significant block of the Left that is willing to openly embrace outright socialism boldly.
You are not going to get anywhere trying to be reasonable with them,
While I fear that's largely true, I do think there's something to be said for trying to win people over from the other side.
and you're also never going to gain any traction with anyone who they have any sway with unless you address at least some of their fears.
I agree with this. The Left should hammer home the following points (all of which I believe I've argued in some form on this forum before):
1. That terrorism kills relatively few people and is not an existential threat.
2. That treating Muslims as the enemy is likely to fuel more terrorism, and that tolerance is actually a strategy to protect our national security.
3. That choosing between safety and liberty is a false dichotomy, that one cannot be preserved without the other.
I'm not sure if that's what you had in mind, but that's what comes to mind for me.
This is what the establishment liberals in the US have never learned. They also refuse to call out conservatives on their lies, which just helps perpetuate them. They need to stand up and fight, and if they can stab the conservatives in the back or blindside them, they should do so, and make no apologies, ever. Use the right's own playbook against them.
While I think you are overgeneralizing somewhat, I also feel that their's some truth to this. I have often been frustrated by the failure of some on the Left to take strong, principled stands.
However, I do not and will never condone using the Tea Party's tactics against it, because I am not an advocate of politics by fraud, fanaticism, defamation, disenfranchisement, and threats and acts of violence. Replacing the Tea Party with a Left wing equivalent is no victory. It scarcely matters who wins if both sides behave like fucking monsters.
In short, the American population needs to grow a collective spine and reject the fearmongering conspiracist bullshit. They need to get out of the puddle of their own piss and think for themselves rather than let demagogues whose personal profits depend on keeping them terrified rule them.
Again, you're overgeneralizing about the American populace, but for many people, this is an entirely fair critique.
Your personal problem is that you inhabit some sort of a naive, idealistic, moralist bubble that is almost as detached from the real world as the conservatives are, and you refuse to question certain assumptions that you hold. That leaves you utterly unable to deal with reality as it actually is, as opposed to a picture of the world as you desire it to be. Reality trumps fancy every time, which is why you're not getting much traction no matter how large walls of text you post.
You have huge potential, but you need to take the blinders off first and learn to see, and to act according to what is real instead of what your wish for reality is. If you manage to do that, you'll be a force to be reckoned with, but if you don't, you'll always be given short shrift.
Walls of text? Sometimes, I suppose, and I'm sorry if its off-putting, but its hard to write a succinct response to such complicated issues without ignoring important points. I'm hardly the only person here who's ever felt compelled to write a lengthy response to something.
As to the rest of this, if I abandoned my moral principles because they are impractical or inconvenient, would I not be showing the very weakness that you castigate the American Left for? Hell, if you want a Left wing version of the Tea Party, you should be applauding me for supposedly inflexibly adhering to my ideology in defiance of facts.
Regardless, while one's principles should always be based in reality, of course, I would contend that we need the idealists. Idealism exists to remind people of what they should be striving towards. And I'd rather aim high than settle from the start. I don't know if that's something I can prove. Its a matter of personal philosophy.
Are my views inaccurate? Sometimes, undoubtably. And believe it or not, I am constantly reevaluating my positions (indeed, I believe this forum has influenced me considerable over the years). To take a pertinent example, my position on airstrikes in Syria evolved from indecisiveness to more or less absolute opposition when Russia became involved, because I felt that the risk of escalating conflict with Russia was too high. That is actually a case where I allowed principle (opposition to Assad and IS) to bow to practical reality (its not worth risking an incident with Russia).
Edit: However, I'd really rather not argue the merits of my intellect or character. It doesn't seem pertinent to the topic, and turning a debate into a defence of my own character comes off as a tad egotistical.