This one is funny (as in odd, not comical).

I understand that Glen is glossing liberalism as a kind of 
(trivialized-individual)-indulgentism.  But I wouldn’t gloss the word that way.

Liberalism should have been about enabling the possible freedoms, and curbing 
the uses of power that we consider exploitative and abusive, which in an 
ungoverned system would always be cropping up and entrenching and concentrating 
themselves.  The core being some notion of freedom that needs to be understood, 
and is not immediately conflated with individual concepts.

I do agree that the west, with the US in the vanguard, has departed from the 
rather complex and sensible notion of individualism that one finds in Scots 
like Adam Smith, toward a quite trivialized notion of the individual and of 
freedom somewhat interpreted in those terms (although even what that relation 
is would take some thought to try to articulate).

But there can be a complex notion of the self, and the relation of its 
development to the social context, without which nothing like a normal human 
self can even form.  The gloss I gave above for liberalism seems quite 
compatible with a complex notion of self, and then it isn’t in an opposition to 
syndicalism, or whatever other evocative words one can recruit from the common 
language to characterize the situated self in a webwork of relations, groups, 
obligations, and so forth.

The splits would then go along somewhat different axes, it seems to me.

Eric


> On Nov 6, 2024, at 12:10 PM, Marcus Daniels <mar...@snoutfarm.com> wrote:
> 
> There’s some unstated assumption you must have.  For the lefties and righties 
> to band together, they’d have to have some basis for a coalition.   What is 
> it beyond the price of milk?   For example, as a liberal I’m in favor of high 
> gas taxes.  High gas taxes discourage use of internal combustion cars, 
> thereby reducing CO2 and mitigating climate change.  In California, the taxes 
> on gas and tolls on bridges help to pay to maintain the roads and mass 
> transit.   And I’d say go ahead and phase out natural gas stoves and furnaces 
> too.  Other liberals I know hate that idea because they believe that will 
> drive up the cost of living which is already high here.   Still other 
> liberals just voted out the local DA because they thought she was soft on 
> crime.   Earlier she was voted in to give young minorities a fairer shot 
> navigating the legal system.  Liberalism is hardly a rigid system of thought. 
>  
> 
> Being inclined to adopt a political philosophy gives scaffolding for what 
> goals are important, how to achieve those goals, and considerations of the 
> greater good where one might put aside their selfish interests.   What I see 
> in last night’s results is just collective selfishness.   I should want to 
> work with such people, so they don’t go ahead and burn everything down?   I 
> expect that many of these folks in the rust belt will need Social Security 
> and Medicare more than I will.   By the time I need it, most of my loved ones 
> will be gone.  Yeah, let’s do this!
>  
> Perhaps I am a liberal in your definition and not a lefty because I don’t 
> care about what happens to them as people (they aren’t my friends or family), 
> but I do care about the kind of social systems that can be sustained.   
> Actual conservatives, on the other hand, believe that there is an evolved 
> social system that is not engineered, but nonetheless is of some quality and 
> should be protected.  The lefties and righties I think you are speaking of 
> don’t care about regulatory social systems at all.  They have diverse goals 
> and values that perhaps could form coalitions, but do those coalitions that 
> have more depth than list of grievances?   This is the new world:  Not just 
> total social atomization, which would be fine with me, but a lack of modeling 
> of others.   None of that cognitive dissonance to deal with if we must march 
> to the same drum of Project 2025.
> 
> Marcus
>  
> From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> on behalf of glen 
> <geprope...@gmail.com>
> Date: Wednesday, November 6, 2024 at 7:58 AM
> To: friam@redfish.com <friam@redfish.com>
> Subject: Re: [FRIAM] How democracies die
> 
> It's funny, actually. The overwhelming majority of my liberal friends either 
> object (through passive aggressive tactics or outright accusations of 
> "nit-picking") or distance themselves from my "moralizing". Nick once did 
> this in a vFriAM, suggesting that I'm too willing to jump to discussing the 
> moral or ethical value/consequence of some sentiment or activity. My attempts 
> to unpack and demonstrate that their liberalism is *founded* in the 
> assumption of individuality and organismal agency fall on deaf ears because 
> they'd rather commit to the in-group and avoid the navel-gazing.
> 
> But in order to distinguish between a lefty and a liberal, you have to dig 
> down into your navel, pry out the lint, and make an attempt at analyzing 
> agency, where it lies, how it's [de]constructed, etc. My conservative friends 
> are more willing to do that than my liberal friends, at least to the extent 
> of a taxonomy of moralized positions. It's right to do this, wrong to do 
> that, etc. They're less individualist than the liberals. Although the 
> liberals actively engage with in-groups and disengage with out-groups, they 
> drop moralized issues like hot potatoes.
> 
> The opportunity I see in Trump's 2nd term is for the lefties and the righties 
> to band together against the liberals. With 8 billion people on the planet, 
> liberalism is a fantasy, or perhaps just a fossilized ideology we have to 
> grow out of as the old people die. Of course, we could depopulate the earth 
> and resuscitate liberalism that way. But that sounds more painful than 
> changing our minds. Hm. Maybe it is easier to kill and die than it is to 
> change one's mind? IDK.
> 
> On 11/6/24 07:18, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> > Harris wasn’t a candidate of the left she was a moderate applying the 
> > technique of triangulation to get elected to keep our institutions from 
> > being abused and damaged by an inappropriate candidate.    I’m not sure 
> > what else she could have done short of finding a way to push Biden out 
> > earlier.   As for me, I’m not shedding any liberal tears.  In a way I’m 
> > looking forward to how Trump will betray his voters and the suffering they 
> > will feel at his hands.  They certainly deserve it.
> > 
> > *From: *Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> on behalf of glen 
> > <geprope...@gmail.com>
> > *Date: *Wednesday, November 6, 2024 at 6:58 AM
> > *To: *friam@redfish.com <friam@redfish.com>
> > *Subject: *Re: [FRIAM] How democracies die
> > 
> > Just for reference, my antifa friends don't recognize any difference. 
> > Nothing's changed from yesterday to today. And while that may seem myopic, 
> > there's a lot of truth to it. Harris is fairly right-leaning with her 
> > record as a prosecutor in CA, position on fracking, failure to denounce the 
> > actions of Israel, etc. The local antifa has been active in things like 
> > blocking ports of entry (particularly for Boeing-related shipments and 
> > such). DDoSecrets has been steadily accumulating data from bad actors. 
> > Unicorn Riot consistently publishes about ongoing  abuse of indigenous 
> > communities. Etc.
> > 
> > W.r.t. deeper changes, a break from status quo *liberalism* (the main 
> > boogeyman of the lefties), could be hastened by another Trump term. I see 
> > it as an opportunity for actual lefty strategists (as opposed to a warmed 
> > over righty like Harris) to design a [de|re]construction plan similar to 
> > Project 2025, but for sane people. Literally *any* of the tactics used by 
> > the Trump backers could be used by an organized effort from the left.
> > 
> > But the problem is that those with the real strategy skills aren't 
> > revolutionaries. As Eric lays out, they're too addicted to the 
> > institutional game to strategize around or to blast through institutions. 
> > That's what makes the tiny antifa efforts like blocking ports (for a tiny 
> > few hours) or breaking windows on main street seem so stupid and indulgent, 
> > like the temper tantrums of an undisciplined child.
> > 
> > And in this regard, I join both my antifa friends and my MAGA friends in 
> > scoffing at the liberal tears. If you actually want change, then buck up 
> > and make it happen. Politics is not a day job you leave at the office at 
> > 6pm. Granted, I'm a tourist in both of those groups - all groups, actually, 
> > and would be happier if Harris had won. But being a tourist allows me to 
> > say such things without too much hypocrisy.
> > 
> > On 11/6/24 02:55, Santafe wrote:
> >> A change that I think can happen, and I don’t know how fully it can change 
> >> in four years, which is the time to find out whether the whole electoral 
> >> system and federal judiciary can be completely rewired, is that Americans 
> >> become a lot more like Russians.  Small, localized, and trying to hunker 
> >> down and get through one’s own little day and little life, and not be 
> >> visible enough to become a target for anything.  Everything that is a 
> >> problem and that needs to change, is a problem because it brings together 
> >> a lot of actors.  To change, it needs coordinated commitments.  That’s 
> >> what wasn’t great in the U.S. already, but gets very very hard in an 
> >> atomized society.  I do expect the bullying and belligerent behavior from 
> >> the MAGA faction, which has already been getting systematically worse over 
> >> the past 9 years, to undergo a large increase.  Maybe by about the same 
> >> factor as cannabis use increased when it got legalized, and for sort of 
> >> similar reasons.  There will continue to be people who don’t like it, as 
> >> there are now, and as there are lots of Chinese who still have global and 
> >> humane views and don’t like the rise of belligerence being driven in their 
> >> society, but aren’t doing anything effective against it.
> >> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> ꙮ Mɥǝu ǝlǝdɥɐuʇs ɟᴉƃɥʇ' ʇɥǝ ƃɹɐss snɟɟǝɹs˙ ꙮ
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