The Atlantic: How American Politics Went Insane
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Intensely interesting article that I feel does quite a bit to explain the increasing polarization and ineffectiveness of our once-lauded political systems. It's a little pro-handshake/pork/favors/et cetera, but highlights well how those lesser evils maintained order and sanity. In some sense, many of our reforms have led to a much greater crisis. Highlights:
Searched and found nothin'!
Intensely interesting article that I feel does quite a bit to explain the increasing polarization and ineffectiveness of our once-lauded political systems. It's a little pro-handshake/pork/favors/et cetera, but highlights well how those lesser evils maintained order and sanity. In some sense, many of our reforms have led to a much greater crisis. Highlights:
Trump, Sanders, and Ted Cruz have in common that they are political sociopathsmeaning not that they are crazy, but that they dont care what other politicians think about their behavior and they dont need to care. That three of the four final presidential contenders in 2016 were political sociopaths is a sign of how far chaos syndrome has gone. The old, mediated system selected such people out. The new, disintermediated system seems to be selecting them in.
Congress has not passed all its annual appropriations bills in 20 years, and more than $300 billion a year in federal spending goes out the door without proper authorization. Routine business such as passing a farm bill or a surface-transportation bill now takes years instead of weeks or months to complete. Today two-thirds of federal-program spending (excluding interest on the national debt) runs on formula-driven autopilot. This automatic spending by so-called entitlement programs eludes the discipline of being regularly voted on, dwarfs old-fashioned pork in magnitude, and is so hard to restrain that its often called the third rail of politics. The political cost has also been high: Congressional leaders lost one of their last remaining tools to induce followership and team play. Trying to be a leader where you have no sticks and very few carrots is dang near impossible, the Republican former Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott told CNN in 2013, shortly after renegade Republicans pointlessly shut down the government. Members dont get anything from you and leaders dont give anything. They dont feel like you can reward them or punish them.
The biggest obstacle, I think, is the general publics reflexive, unreasoning hostility to politicians and the process of politics. Neurotic hatred of the political class is the countrys last universally acceptable form of bigotry. Because that problem is mental, not mechanical, it really is hard to remedy.
In March, a Trump supporter told The New York Times, I want to see Trump go up there and do damage to the Republican Party. Another said, We know who Donald Trump is, and were going to use Donald Trump to either take over the G.O.P. or blow it up. That kind of anti-establishment nihilism deserves no respect or accommodation in American public life. Populism, individualism, and a skeptical attitude toward politics are all healthy up to a point, but America has passed that point. Political professionals and parties have many shortcomings to answer forincluding, primarily on the Republican side, their self-mutilating embrace of anti-establishment rhetoricbut relentlessly bashing them is no solution. You havent heard anyone say this, but its time someone did: Our most pressing political problem today is that the country abandoned the establishment, not the other way around.