Ha! That reminded me of this:

California county on track to be run by militia-aligned group
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/feb/03/california-county-controlled-by-militia-group

I don't feel too sorry for Moty because my character alert bells went off a bit 
while reading his words ... like his objections are really just acoustic 
emissions. (Get off my lawn!) But I say Good Riddance. I'd be outta Shasta in a 
heartbeat.

On 2/4/22 09:02, Marcus Daniels wrote:
As Omicron was ramping up Joy Reid said something along the lines of “Is there 
a way to cut out a safe place to live these days [free from all the anti-vaxxer 
crazies]?”

That resonated with me.  I think that’s a plausible way how life could be in ten 
years.   Some municipalities & companies, maybe some states, will appeal to 
individuals that value, well, reason, and others will not.   Then the exercise 
becomes one of which brands are in some sense profitable.   This will of course 
deepen polarization, but over the course of several generations the unprofitable 
approaches will die a desperate and lonely and death.   Some of the woke brands 
won’t make it, but neither will some of the reactionary brands.    It is not clear 
what will happen to the federal government during this time, perhaps the kind of 
oscillation the author imagines.   The trick will be to insulate oneself from it 
until the political power of the crazies is ground down by repeated failure and 
steadily decreasing economic power.

*From:* Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> *On Behalf Of *Steve Smith
*Sent:* Friday, February 4, 2022 8:32 AM
*To:* friam@redfish.com
*Subject:* [FRIAM] Democracy in Name Only: endemic regime instability

Someone here is more likely than I to have actually read Ziblatt and Levitsky's How 
Democracies Die 
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_Democracies_Die#:~:text=How%20Democracies%20Die%20is%20a,process%20to%20increase%20their%20power.>

A recent article (behind a subscribe-wall) included the following quote:

https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/united-states/2022-01-20/americas-coming-age-instability
 
<https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/united-states/2022-01-20/americas-coming-age-instability>

    /America may no longer be safe for democracy, but it remains inhospitable 
to autocracy./

    /Rather than autocracy, the United States appears headed toward endemic 
regime instability. /

    /Such a scenario would be marked by frequent constitutional crises, 
including contested or stolen elections and severe conflict between presidents 
and Congress (such as impeachments and executive efforts to bypass Congress), 
the judiciary (such as efforts to purge or pack the courts), and state 
governments (such as intense battles over voting rights and the administration 
of elections). The United States would likely shift back and forth between 
periods of dysfunctional democracy and periods of competitive authoritarian 
rule during which incumbents abuse state power, tolerate or encourage violent 
extremism, and tilt the electoral playing field against their rivals./

I found this characterization of our plight very compelling, if also very 
disturbing.

It seems as if we have "tumbled our gyros" but in a different mode than the rhetoric about 
"Civil War" and "Descent into Autocracy" seem to suggest.   It also characterizes a lot 
of the aspiring/limping democracies we know of in the world today up to and including extreme examples such 
as Russia which fits the DINO (democracy in name only) label pretty well.

This conception of the problem lead me to a very well written HS student-essay by the 
same title: democracy-in-name-only 
<https://hac.bard.edu/amor-mundi/democracy-in-name-only-2020-01-02>.

Within this essay was a poignant quote:


    In the words of Alexis de Tocqueville,

        /“A new science of politics is needed for a new world. This, however, 
is what we think of least; launched in the middle of a rapid stream, we 
obstinately fix our eyes on the ruins which may still be descried upon the 
shore we have left, while the current sweeps us along, and drives us backward 
toward the gulf.”/

--
glen
When elephants fight, it is the grass that suffers.


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