particularly the ones they had when they were not dead
― plee help i am lookin for (crüt), Saturday, 11 February 2012 00:54 (fourteen years ago)
xp haha just teasing ya, "some dead guy thought this so we can't do it " is the wool that scalia & thomas et. al have been pulling over everybody's eyes for awhile now
― http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1tAYmMjLdY (dayo), Saturday, 11 February 2012 00:54 (fourteen years ago)
I am interested in the thoughts of a lot of dead people fwiw
― plee help i am lookin for (crüt), Friday, February 10, 2012 7:53 PM (43 seconds ago) Bookmark
yeah but when it's like "people get to buy AK-47s to-day because some guy in the 1780s could buy a blunderbuss", I'm like fuck what that dead person thought
― http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1tAYmMjLdY (dayo), Saturday, 11 February 2012 00:57 (fourteen years ago)
1) kentucky and virginia resolutions (passed in opposition to the alien and sedition acts)2) several states attempted to reject the fugitive slave law (passed at the behest of the slave states, despite their supposed hatred of fed power)3) medical marijuana4) no child left behind
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Friday, February 10, 2012 7:53 PM (3 minutes ago) Bookmark
200+ years of states rights and this is the best list you can come up with?
the first three are certainly all instances where the federally-passed law seems wrong, J.D. it's just that the principle in question isn't really states' rights. it's individual rights in all cases. (so fine, not always racist/homophobic.)
no child left behind is tricky, and i know obama has allowed some states some leeway from it, which is good, but the main problem with it imo is that it holds public schools to a certain standard but those schools are funded unequally. if it funded poor schools such that they were as well funded as schools in wealthy districts i think i would mostly be okay with it? allowing for more varied evaluation?
― horseshoe, Saturday, 11 February 2012 01:00 (fourteen years ago)
xposts oh totally, I was just making a throwaway comment. I have been hanging back from serious political discussion ever since earlier today when I misguidedly responded to a facebook friend sharing a Michelle Malkin article & got sucked into a vortex of loonies.
― plee help i am lookin for (crüt), Saturday, 11 February 2012 01:00 (fourteen years ago)
and didn't penalize already struggling schools financially
― horseshoe, Saturday, 11 February 2012 01:02 (fourteen years ago)
lol what is this thread about again?
ongoing "states rights" bullshit in arizona
― plee help i am lookin for (crüt), Saturday, 11 February 2012 01:03 (fourteen years ago)
horseshoe otm states p much useless
― iatee, Saturday, 11 February 2012 01:08 (fourteen years ago)
let's get rid of counties and cities too. fuck 'em all
― plee help i am lookin for (crüt), Saturday, 11 February 2012 01:10 (fourteen years ago)
no cities are cool
― iatee, Saturday, 11 February 2012 01:10 (fourteen years ago)
I propose we divide the US into the original best form of democracy, the polis
― http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1tAYmMjLdY (dayo), Saturday, 11 February 2012 01:12 (fourteen years ago)
it's just that the principle in question isn't really states' rights. it's individual rights in all cases.
or maybe the principle in each case could be described in a more specific way. sometimes i feel like american rights discourse itself is the problem, like "states' rights" rhetoric is some grotesque parodic outgrowth of our political culture.
― horseshoe, Saturday, 11 February 2012 01:12 (fourteen years ago)
― plee help i am lookin for (crüt), Friday, February 10, 2012 8:10 PM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― iatee, Friday, February 10, 2012 8:10 PM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
lol saw this coming
― horseshoe, Saturday, 11 February 2012 01:14 (fourteen years ago)
4) no child left behind
more on this one?
― high five delivery device (Abbbottt), Saturday, 11 February 2012 01:50 (fourteen years ago)
i think he meant that no child left behind is a federally imposed statute that various states experience as counter-productive and restrictive? and might indeed invoke "states' rights" as a reason it should be repealed.
― horseshoe, Saturday, 11 February 2012 01:54 (fourteen years ago)
look, it's ilx, i'm not going to write a book
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Saturday, 11 February 2012 01:56 (fourteen years ago)
another big recent accomplishment at the state-by-state level that probably would have been impossible at the national/federal level = gay marriage
― Little GTFO (contenderizer), Saturday, 11 February 2012 06:47 (fourteen years ago)
in a world w/o the senate, electoral college, etc. gay marriage would have already been feasible at the national level
― iatee, Saturday, 11 February 2012 06:51 (fourteen years ago)
you can't just make up hypothetical otherworlds and say that they would be better just because it can be imagined that they might. sure, in a completely dictatorial, top-down system, anyone could have imposed any laws they might have wished. but only very recently has gay marriage begun to seem palatable to a majority of americans. it seems to me that this has been a product of the fact that a few states did pass such laws, among many other things. the existence of gay marriage at the state level made it seem less impossible, demonstrated that it wasn't gonna destroy the fabric of american life in a heartbeat.
― Little GTFO (contenderizer), Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:01 (fourteen years ago)
and a simple way of thinking about the value of state governance is local governance. states can make decisions for themselves, as decided by their own populations, in ways that respond to their unique cultures and situations. a fully top-down government would likely have a much harder time efficiently and sensibly making decisions for every area within the country.
another way to think about this is the value of the stasis generated by opposed powers. i used to work for the VHA (veteran's healt admin) in DC. it was a horribly stagnant and inefficient place, with endless layers of bureaucracy and redundancy that prevented anything from ever getting done, or so it seemed. at first this pissed me off, because it seemed so wasteful and demoralizing. in the long run, though, i came to see a certain wisdom in it. the VHA, you see, is run from the top down by a presidential appointee and the senate. so its management is highly politicized and in constant turmoil. it changes completely every few years, and the new management always wants to overhaul everything, clean house, even simply figure out what's going on. that flux at the top threatens the ability of the organization to do the day to day work to which it's dedicated. so its apparent inefficiency is in a sense defensive. it's what preserves the VHA's ability to work at all.
state vs fed is similar. the fed would like to be able to dictate police everywhere & for everyone. why not? if you have a good idea and a mandate, why let it go to waste? same with the states. they'd like to handle their own business - with federal help & largesse, sure, but without federal interference. by opposing these desires, you generate enough systemic stasis/inefficiency to limit the "helpful" meddling of whoever happens to be holding the reins at any given moment.
― Little GTFO (contenderizer), Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:02 (fourteen years ago)
several errors, key among them "police" = "policy"
― Little GTFO (contenderizer), Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:03 (fourteen years ago)
we are arguing about whether states are good things or bad things and there really isn't any way to do that without making up hypothetical otherworlds. are there some progressive policies that can be passed on a state-level and eventually might benefit the whole country? yes. sure. does that make up for the contributions statehood has to our fucked up politics? no. not even close.
― iatee, Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:05 (fourteen years ago)
none of that good gov't shit even matters because it doesn't come anywhere close to making up for the inherent democratic and economic distortions that come w/ statehood. the alternative to statehood doesn't have to be a fully top-down government, there are flexible middle-ground possibilities where you can ensure that local and regional leaders have independence without ensuring that people in wyoming get 70x the democratic representation as people in california.
― iatee, Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:11 (fourteen years ago)
Seems to me that "states" are this weird, arbitrary creation that doesn't really have a lot of relevance in the 21st century. City/county governance makes a lot of sense, seeing to the needs of a small area, governed by people who understand the specific needs of that area. National governance also makes quite a lot of sense, governing on matters that should transcend borders, i.e. the civil rights of citizens. States exist in this middle ground that was very important when simple information took days to travel a few hundred miles, but just doesn't fit into the way the contemporary world work anymore.
xpost like the man said
― ENERGY FOOD (en i see kay), Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:13 (fourteen years ago)
contemporary world works
yeesh
― ENERGY FOOD (en i see kay), Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:16 (fourteen years ago)
i personally think that state-level governance has been quite successful in the US, though it has often provided safe haven for bigots and hampered the fed's ability to impose what i view as necessary national policy. then again, like gay marriage, the fights for the social policies i really value have often begun at and boiled up from the state level. i mean, local government just makes sense. one of the reasons we didn't have massive starvation and chaos following our revolution (as has happened so often elsewhere) was that there wasn't anybody trying to set agricultural policy for the entire nation. when it comes to agriculture, to continue the example, a lot of our most asinine and backwards policies are those enacted by the fed. i'm not saying it's a perfect balance, but it's far to easy to write off state-level governance as a mere smokescreen for bigotry - though it certainly can be just that.
― Little GTFO (contenderizer), Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:17 (fourteen years ago)
there are flexible middle-ground possibilities where you can ensure that local and regional leaders have independence without ensuring that people in wyoming get 70x the democratic representation as people in california.
― iatee, Friday, February 10, 2012 11:11 PM (5 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
okay, yeah, this i agree with. the present system is deeply flawed.
― Little GTFO (contenderizer), Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:18 (fourteen years ago)
a lot of our most asinine and backwards policies are enacted because rural *states* have disproportionate political influence at the federal level
― iatee, Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:19 (fourteen years ago)
yeah, that too, state reps gaming the system. point taken.
― Little GTFO (contenderizer), Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:23 (fourteen years ago)
and again, the alternative to states isn't 'barack obama makes every law in america'. there are lots of ways to do regional government that would be more efficient, democratic and logical.
take california. that is a huge place. it should not be 'a state'. it should be 5 states probably. ignoring everything else, the fact that it is 'a state' creates thousands of problems. there's no reason why bakersfield and san francisco should be governed by the same regional body, and there is no flexibility in the state-model to fix that problem. likewise there is no reason why kansas city should be governed by two separate regional bodies.
― iatee, Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:26 (fourteen years ago)
Absolutely. I grew up in metro0east St. Louis, and it is absurd that East St. Louis, IL is governed by the same regional laws as Chicago, instead of St. Louis, MO, seeing as how the operate as the same metro area.
I mean, this is all Poli Sci 101 flights of fancy, we all know that the current states will exist until the Nuclear/Climate wars of 2073 split the USA into 76 distinct fiefdoms, but it's worth discussing anyway.
― ENERGY FOOD (en i see kay), Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:32 (fourteen years ago)
or the fact that the new york city region is in fact, 3 states, creates bullshit problems. bloomberg had to give the company freshdirect tax breaks so that they would not move the headquarters across the river, to a part of new jersey that is part of greater nyc. that's ridiculous - nyc shouldn't have to pay a business that's gonna stay in nyc to 'stay in nyc'. you can argue that some types of regional competition are good, but this is competition *within a region* - freshdirect was gonna stay here regardless.
― iatee, Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:33 (fourteen years ago)
while at the same time voters in upstate new york get to elect people who get to decide how much funding the subway system should get. there are very few states that would be drawn w/ anything close to their current boundaries today, and that's not a small issue, it's an enormous economic and democratic inefficiency that affects things for everyone, everywhere.
― iatee, Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:36 (fourteen years ago)
this is also an argument against our system of city boundaries fwiw
― iatee, Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:39 (fourteen years ago)
okay, i'm gonna call a TO here for a minute, because this is drifting a little to quickly for my comfort. my basic argument is that "states' rights" has value as a concept, whether or not we like that language, and that it's not fair to reduce the idea entirely to a simple smokescreen for bigotry. i do believe that. beyond that, i do see value in local government at various levels, including something like what presently = the state level. i think we agree on that point?
okay, that's thing one. thing two, is that i'm not much of a utopian. i don't do ideal societies or radical changes. i'm more concerned with identifying where things are and finding a reasonable next move, given my ideals. so talk of dismantling the senate or breaking california up into however many pieces doesn't interest me much. there's no way to say what the outcome would be if such things did happen, and this is doubly true since i can't imagine likely circumstances under which such things might even become possible. i certainly can't see any reason to actively work towards these things.
i mean, i do tend to agree that the senate is a obsolete organ of state and that california is unwieldy...
― Little GTFO (contenderizer), Saturday, 11 February 2012 07:44 (fourteen years ago)
this is sort of a different argument than the one we began with -- i'm all for making local governments stronger and more representative. i suppose i read 'federalism' as 'division of power' rather than 'pro-state.'
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Saturday, 11 February 2012 08:01 (fourteen years ago)
'states' rights' doesn't have any power that 'regions' rights' can't. unless you think there is some real advantage to the clunky, inflexible regional boundaries we have today, there is no reason to defend 'states'. you can defend strong regional and local power without defending 'states'.
there's no reason why 50 states is an ideal number of regional boundaries, and there's also no reason why regional boundary lines can't be redrawn at least *once in a while*. if 50 is the ideal number of regions today, then it surely wasn't the ideal number when we had half our population and it won't be the ideal number one day.
and I didn't even mention bigotry, which is pretty clearly a huge issue but not even one that *needs* to exist for states to be a shitty idea, really something that fucks us in so many ways we don't even think about.
― iatee, Saturday, 11 February 2012 08:02 (fourteen years ago)
arizona is sort've the textbook example of a state government that's running roughshod over what remains of the independence of its city and county governments.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Saturday, 11 February 2012 08:04 (fourteen years ago)
there's no reason why 50 states is an ideal number of regional boundaries, and there's also no reason why regional boundary lines can't be redrawn at least *once in a while*.
Well, no *real* reason, but Constitutionally we're not allowed to make states out of any portion of an existing state.
― The Large Hardon Collider (Phil D.), Saturday, 11 February 2012 12:38 (fourteen years ago)
internet konked out last night, so this is like 12 hours late, but uh...
― iatee, Friday, February 10, 2012 11:39 PM (5 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
well, it's an argument that identifies problems in the way things are. and that's valuable, but are you really proposing a solution to any of this? if we redraw city and state boundaries every few years to reflect changes in populations and industries, then we create this massive, awful political football that gets tossed around endlessly. there's efficiency in inefficiency, reason to let sleeping dogs lie. just because a problem can be identified does not mean that a fix is required. better to have no answer than a bad one. but yeah, i agree w/ n-i-c-k that it's useful to discuss this stuff, even if no solution is forthcoming.
― Little GTFO (contenderizer), Saturday, 11 February 2012 19:01 (fourteen years ago)
well am I proposing a solution that could happen w/ our current system of gov't and w/ the assumption that in the big picture americans are rational political actors? no. our current system has vested interests. people who currently benefit from our ridiculous state boundaries might not even know they have vested interests, but if the subject ever came up, nobody is going to give up what they have. people in wyoming are not gonna say "wow it's pretty ridiculous how much power we have considering that we only exist as a regional body for historical reasons, let's vote for a senator who votes his office out of existence and a system that ensures that we don't get a disproportionate amount of resources sent to the magical lines that constitute 'wyoming'.
congressional districts already are a political football that get tossed around endlessly. it's annoying, gerrymandering is awful and there should and can be a a better way, but nobody argues that it would be better if we still had the same congressional district boundaries as we did when america had 50 million people.
in the end you're going to have to draw a line in the sand w/r/t how often regional boundaries are redrawn, how they're redrawn and why. but should they be, at least, idk, once every hundred years? yes. and should they be roughly equal in political representation on a national level, so we don't allow rural interests to run a country in the 21st century? yes.
― iatee, Saturday, 11 February 2012 19:53 (fourteen years ago)
people in wyoming are not gonna say "wow it's pretty ridiculous how much power we have..."
^^ this is why any radical (or even signifigant) political reorganization of the USA will not happen without a deep, rather fast-developing political crisis to drive it.
― Aimless, Saturday, 11 February 2012 20:09 (fourteen years ago)
iatee otm
― diln (k3vin k.), Saturday, 11 February 2012 20:17 (fourteen years ago)
Not racist, but still lol Arizona. Seriously, this place is just Crazypantstown.
Five GOP Senators in Arizona have introduced a bill in Arizona that would make the lives of teachers and professors a living hell inside and outside of school. Senator Al Melvin, Senator Andy Biggs, Senator Don Shooter, Senator Lori Klein, and Senator Steve Smith are the sponsors of SB 1467, which would prohibit teachers from engaging in “speech or conduct that would violate the standards adopted by the federal communications commission concerning obscenity, indecency and profanity if that speech or conduct were broadcast on television or radio.” In other words, teachers can’t do things that aren’t allowed on television.
― The Large Hardon Collider (Phil D.), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 15:56 (fourteen years ago)
what the fuck
― Critique of Pure Moods (goole), Wednesday, 15 February 2012 15:57 (fourteen years ago)
that seems . . . unconstitutional
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 15:59 (fourteen years ago)
haha mookie
― horseshoe, Wednesday, 15 February 2012 16:00 (fourteen years ago)
what on earth