2/12/2026 at 1:59:17 PM
> This Isn't About Politics> I'm a veteran. I served under both parties. I don't care which side of the aisle fixes this.
The idea that there are things entirely unpartisan or unpolitical is a polite fiction we can work with when things are somewhere around normal - usually even when things are pretty far from normal.
I get the army drilled this stance into you, but at some point the price the people pay for corruption includes their security.
It is, in fact, about politics.
by athrowaway3z
2/12/2026 at 2:06:27 PM
I think you're technically right but missing what the guy is actually doing. When he says "this isn't about politics" he's not making some naive claim that governance exists outside of politics. He's saying "please don't retreat into the red team blue team thing here." And that's a legitimate move.The word politics has basically split into two meanings that we swap between without noticing. There's the original sense, the art of navigating collective decisions, how we share power and resources. That version is unavoidable and actually kind of noble. Then there's what the word has come to mean in practice, which is identity-driven team sport. My side versus your side. Performance and signaling.
When you say "it is, in fact, about politics" you're technically correct in the first sense but you're activating the second sense, which is exactly the frame he's trying to get people out of. He's trying to create a space where people engage with the substance without immediately sorting into camps. That's valuable even if the distinction is a little artificial.
It's kind of a trap honestly. The escape hatch from tribal politics has itself become a political move, so you can always say "well actually that's political too." True, but not very useful if you're trying to get anywhere.
by perfmode
2/12/2026 at 8:05:21 PM
Oh i think you misunderstand. I know perfectly well what he's doing, and I am saying I understand. I know it works. Even when everything is not normal - collective decisions can be made.I'm saying to consider if we've reached the point where the effects of political corruption is shaping reality beyond that point.
by athrowaway3z
2/12/2026 at 2:08:56 PM
> I think you're technically right but missing what the guy is actually doing. When he says "this isn't about politics" he's not making some naive claim that governance exists outside of politics. He's saying "please don't retreat into the red team blue team thing here." And that's a legitimate move.We've got a great term for the latter, and everyone is already familiar with it. Add the adjective "party". Done.
by deaux
2/12/2026 at 2:20:55 PM
continuing off the tangent, "party" is a noun, not an adjective. In a construction "party politics", it functions _like_ an adjective, but it remains a noun.Similarly, "computer" in "computer games" is a noun that modifies the meaning of the following noun. Modifying nouns like this always are in singular.
by luplex
2/12/2026 at 2:56:31 PM
Specifically this type of modifier is called a "noun adjunct"by cmpb
2/12/2026 at 2:24:40 PM
Great point, thanks for the correction.by deaux
2/12/2026 at 2:35:19 PM
what about "sports betting"by milkshakes
2/12/2026 at 7:18:10 PM
adverbial nounby judahmeek
2/12/2026 at 6:40:28 PM
The Republican party won't change so long as they keep getting rewarded electorally. People respond to incentives, not to pleading.To put it a different way, if America wants republicans to get good at collective decision making, they need to play team sports and vote democrats, repeatedly for at least 10 years. Probably longer, since that incompetence is so entrenched. There is no other way, and anyone who tries to be non-partisan is just wasting time.
by Herring
2/12/2026 at 2:17:02 PM
But you should write that to the OP, they are the one who misuses the term "politics" in the 2nd sense. The answer to confusing terms is not a retreat from the original definition, but education. Otherwise you're opening doors to these political moves.by js8
2/12/2026 at 2:59:55 PM
Politics used to mean diplomacy and work across multiple groups with differing but also overlapping incentive structures.Not two “teams” beating each other over the head.
by DANmode
2/12/2026 at 3:27:01 PM
^ this is correctby homeonthemtn
2/12/2026 at 2:50:44 PM
Surely the reason why appeasement isn't working is that we just haven't appeased hard enough!"Both sides" / "tribes bad" / "transcend the conflict" discourse is such cancer, because intentionally ignoring the most pertinent parameters of a conflict is not a neutral choice. When Donald Trump said he would end the Russia/Ukraine conflict on Day 1, we didn't fear that he was lying, we feared that he was serious because we all knew that the only way to actually do it would have been to force Ukrainian defeat. When your toddler is screaming because the smell of cooking has made him hungry but he has to wait, giving in to his demands is not conflict-transcending 3D chess, it's teaching your kid that tantrums are an effective tool. The same goes for politics.
by smallmancontrov
2/12/2026 at 2:02:54 PM
It will have to get a lot of worse in order to get better. Voters have to be in a lot more pain to give the non-crazy party control to actually fix fundamental problems.Note: I'm an independent, but the current administration is incompetent on an embarrassing level.
by bwb
2/12/2026 at 2:10:27 PM
We're going to need to, at the very bare minimum, fix campaign finance before we are able to produce a party that will fight for a stable democracy.Tbh, I don't see any way going back to democracy and rule of law is possible without completely rewriting our constitution.
by FranklinJabar
2/12/2026 at 2:16:01 PM
> without completely rewriting our constitution.there is no need to rewrite it, because it's fine. What's not fine is people not observing it, and defending it with their lives, and making sure that violations are actioned with penalties, social stigma and disdain.
by chii
2/12/2026 at 2:29:47 PM
The fact that this conversation is happening at all is indicative that our current form of government and its founding documents were inadequate in preventing the existing situation.If the constitution was appropriate, the people would have the explicit legal means of remedying this situation without relying on elections several years after the constitutional crises was underway.
by sheikhnbake
2/12/2026 at 3:02:44 PM
A piece of paper doesn't make any difference if what's written is not observed, nor the rules it laid out followed. The fact that the president can commit crimes - like declaring war without the approval of congress - and have no consequences, means that the problem isn't with the written text, it's in enforcing it. And citizens can only enforce it with elections, or with civil unrest.by chii
2/12/2026 at 4:47:44 PM
I would say that the constitution not enshrining a method of enforcement outside the auspices of the executive branch is an inherent failing of the document. Which would then indict its inability to be amended as originally intended over time.The fact that it was intended to be a living document and has not remained so, I would argue, is partially responsible for our current predicament.
by sheikhnbake
2/12/2026 at 5:38:15 PM
The legal remedy is impeachment. That was tried twice, and in subsequent elections “the people” reacted by moving us even farther away from being able to use it. There’s no constitutional problem here; there’s a people problem.by wrs
2/12/2026 at 6:51:28 PM
The fact that it was intended to be a living document and has not remained so, I would argue, is partially responsible for our current predicament.by sheikhnbake
2/12/2026 at 2:18:05 PM
> because it's fine.You are blind. The senate and electoral college and lack of clearly distributed powers have meant that we have never functioned as a liberal democracy despite our lofty rhetoric claiming otherwise.
by FranklinJabar
2/12/2026 at 2:27:27 PM
Everyone acts like the electoral college was a blunder. The founding fathers studied the democracies of ancient Greece, and they made a very intentional choice to guard against unfettered democracy. You were supposed to be involved in local politics, where you could actually know and evaluate your representatives. Those representatives were supposed to make national decisions on your behalf, including choosing the president.I'm not qualified to know who will make a good president. You probably aren't either. Pushing the process further into American Idol territory would make it worse, not better.
by allknowingfrog
2/12/2026 at 3:09:59 PM
> Those representatives were supposed to make national decisions on your behalf, including choosing the president.This is, incidentally, how we massively screwed up the federal government. In the original design US Senators were elected by the state legislatures, the premise being that they would prevent federal overreach into the regulatory domain of the states because they would be directly accountable to the state governments.
Then populists who wanted to do everything at the federal level pushed for the 17th Amendment which eliminated the state governments' representation in the federal government and people stopped caring about local politics because it started feeling like an exercise in futility when federal law could preempt anything you wanted to do and the thing meant to keep that in check was deleted.
And the federal government was supposed to have enumerated (i.e. narrow, limited) powers. It doesn't have the scaffolding for people to hold it accountable. You can elect the local dogcatcher but the only elected office in the entire federal executive branch is the President of the United States. Which is fine when the main thing they're doing is negotiating treaties and running the Post Office but not fine if you're trying to do thousands of pages of federal regulations on everything from healthcare to banking to labor to energy.
by AnthonyMouse
2/12/2026 at 4:52:26 PM
That's somewhat ahistorical, the 17th amendment happened because state legislatures were frequently deadlocked and could not appoint senators, meaning states went without senate representation entirely.In a fifteen year period 46 senate elections were deadlocked in 20 states, at one point Delaware had an open senate seat for four years due to this.
That said the proper reform to this would've been the abolition of the senate, as it has always been and will always be an anti-democratic force, not moving for senators to be elected by the people.
by dkuntz2
2/12/2026 at 5:13:41 PM
> That's somewhat ahistorical, the 17th amendment happened because state legislatures were frequently deadlocked and could not appoint senators, meaning states went without senate representation entirely.That seems more like an excuse than a legitimate reason. If that was actually the problem you could solve it by adopting a mechanism to break ties, putting the vote to the public only in the event of a tie, having the state legislatures use score voting which makes two candidates getting exactly the same score far less likely, etc.
But if they want to do a power grab then they get further by saying "we have to do something about these deadlocks" than by saying "we want to do a power grab".
> That said the proper reform to this would've been the abolition of the senate, as it has always been and will always be an anti-democratic force
It's supposed to be an anti-democratic force, like the Supreme Court, the existence of Constitutional rights and the entire concept of even having a federal government instead of allowing local voters to have full plenary power over local laws. Unconstrained direct democracy is a populist whirlwind of impulsive reactionary forces.
by AnthonyMouse
2/12/2026 at 8:31:12 PM
> Unconstrained direct democracy is a populist whirlwind of impulsive reactionary forces.This is a great point as is the point that the existence of a federal government itself is anti-democratic.
The Senate was initially created as a body that was incentivized to promote federalism itself (especially through their power to approve federal judges) & a federalist republic seems to be the most democratic system because it incentivizes a balance between individual liberty & the ability to restrict someone else's liberty through law.
Right now, the balance of power is too centralized which makes for radical changes every time a different political party takes control of government.
by judahmeek
2/12/2026 at 4:26:42 PM
>I'm not qualified to know who will make a good president. You probably aren't either. Pushing the process further into American Idol territory would make it worse, not better.I reject this premise. I'm not omniscient but I have a pretty good idea.
by shigawire
2/12/2026 at 10:08:36 PM
> The founding fathers studied the democracies of ancient Greece, and they made a very intentional choice to guard against unfettered democracy.This doesn't make their decision good. It has consistently failed to produce politicians that represent the needs of the people who live here.
Democracy may be bad; but what we have is orders of magnitude worse.
by FranklinJabar
2/12/2026 at 3:03:42 PM
> I'm not qualified to know who will make a good president. You probably aren't either. Pushing the process further into American Idol territory would make it worse, not better.Randomly-selected citizens would have outperformed what we’ve gotten in the last few elections at minimum.
Genuinely think we should consider that.
by DANmode
2/12/2026 at 4:21:56 PM
Athens actually had part of the legislative body chosen by random lot. It makes some amount of sense as a check against entrenched power structures.by deltoidmaximus
2/12/2026 at 2:40:36 PM
The Electoral College is part of the slavery compromise and the slavery compromise was a blunder.by Marazan
2/12/2026 at 2:57:57 PM
That doesn't really fit the math. At the time of the founding the largest colony was Virginia and of the original 13 colonies, 9 were in the North and only 4 were states that ended up in the Confederacy, i.e. it was the slave states that were underrepresented in the electoral college and the Senate.by AnthonyMouse
2/12/2026 at 4:42:20 PM
No, because the slave states got to count slaves as 3/5 of a person for EC purposes.If the president was elected by popular vote, slaves would count as zero because they obviously weren't going to let them vote.
by TheCoelacanth
2/12/2026 at 6:09:00 PM
That's independent of the EC. They could have given the slave owners 3/5ths of a vote for each slave without the EC. And obviously that part of the system is no longer in operation, whereas the part Democrats complain about is that each state gets +2 electoral votes regardless of its population.Which nominally gives slightly more weight to the lower population rural states, but that isn't even the primary consequence of the EC. The primary consequence is that it gives significantly more weight to swing states, which by definition don't favor any given party.
by AnthonyMouse
2/12/2026 at 6:43:01 PM
> They could have given the slave owners 3/5ths of a vote for each slave without the ECYes, I suppose if you could accept the idea of a ludicrous hypothetical alternative that would have zero chance in reality of being implemented you can contort yourself enough to ignore that the EC is part of the compromise on slavery that forms the Constitution.
by Marazan
2/12/2026 at 3:55:24 PM
Virginia was a slave state at that time (I think it was 8 slave states to 5 non). The states that eventually joined the confederacy are different from those that had legalized slavery when the Constitution was signed.by garciansmith
2/12/2026 at 4:15:13 PM
> Virginia was a slave state at that timeIndeed Virginia was a slave state at the time, and was later part of the Confederacy, and it was the most underrepresented state in the Senate and electoral college at the founding, since those bodies cause higher population states to be underrepresented relative to their population.
> The states that eventually joined the confederacy are different from those that had legalized slavery when the Constitution was signed.
All of the states had legalized slavery when the Constitution was signed. But it was already gathering detractors even then. The states that wanted to keep it the most were the ones that ended up in the Confederacy and they were both a minority of the original colonies and a minority of the states at the time of the civil war.
by AnthonyMouse
2/12/2026 at 6:13:47 PM
> Pushing the process further into American Idol territory would make it worse, not better.Not for nothing, but the party that bangs on hardest about the sanctity and infallibility of the Electoral College is the one that is far and away the worst for "American Idol-type politicians". In recent times:
- Donald Trump
- Ronald Reagan
- Fred Thompson
Even at the state level:
- Arnold Schwarzenegger
- Jesse Ventura
- Sonny Bono
- Clint Eastwood
by FireBeyond
2/12/2026 at 2:42:13 PM
Then we must repeal the state laws criminalizing electors not voting in line with the states popular vote allocation, and directly elect electors to ensure they are people of sound morals and judgement rather than partisan hacks. Because at the moment the electoral college serves no function besides distorting the popular vote. Any other possible function has been removed by law.by mastax
2/12/2026 at 2:29:36 PM
> please refrain from personal attacks.by ambicapter
2/12/2026 at 2:29:10 PM
This is perfect as the enemy of the good.There have been plenty of times the country has functioned extremely well with the exact same setup as it is now.
The issue is everyone being greedy cowards instead of actually fighting for what matters.
by lazide
2/12/2026 at 2:39:54 PM
I don't think everyone is being greedy cowards. Our system is designed to domesticate people through threat of poverty or state sanctioned violence.Resistance is difficult because it typically requires great personal sacrifice. It's hard to protest when you have to work to feed and shelter your family. It's hard to resist law enforcement when your life is the price.
The working class's current inability to resist tyranny isn't an accident.
by sheikhnbake
2/12/2026 at 3:05:42 PM
> resist tyrannyit always takes sacrifice to resist tyranny. It's just that there's been less tyranny in the past half century, that the new generation raised have not had to make sacrifices, and thus don't feel they need to. Surely, somebody else will make that sacrifice when the time comes...
by chii
2/12/2026 at 4:52:26 PM
Millenials have been killed by the current admin, and both Gen Z and Millenials have been in the streets across the country consistently since the current admin took office. Not sure what news you're consuming that you would think the way you do.by sheikhnbake
2/12/2026 at 3:11:35 PM
Yup, and that ‘why doesn’t someone else do something’ while refusing to actually do the hard part themselves is exactly the greedy coward part.Which, given current incentives re: law and order does seem to be the sanest thing to do from a local minima perspective.
However, it is also one of the worst outcomes from a global perspective.
by lazide
2/12/2026 at 3:30:26 PM
The "constitution is good, we just need to follow it" attitude missed out on the rot that occurred before Trump that enabled Trump and supports him to this day. That rot occured under both parties, when guardrails were followed and rules were in place and observed.by bediger4000
2/12/2026 at 6:18:48 PM
The Constitution was expected - as described in the document itself - to be reviewed and revised and updated every 20 years or so.The last one proposed and ratified was in 1971, 55 years ago, the 26th, around lowering the voting age. (Yes, there is a 27th, but that was proposed in 1789 and just took two centuries to be ratified - guess what it was about? Prohibiting Congress from changing their own pay in the current election cycle...).
by FireBeyond
2/12/2026 at 3:40:15 PM
Agreed. And in my opinion, a big part of the rot was that Congress became progressively more dysfunctional. (When was the last time they passed an annual budget? That is the most basic job of Congress, and they haven't been able to do it for years.)by AnimalMuppet
2/12/2026 at 7:01:18 PM
I'm not going to argue the "progressively dysfunctional". The Hastert Rule has a lot to do with that. Individual members can't cut deals for votes any more. But it looks like there have been appropriations bills every year.Don't take this as disagreement with your basic assertion. Failing to declare war since 1941, failing to impeach and convict Clinton, failure to impeach and convict Trump at least once, the House checks and balances Dem presidents, and aids and abets Republicans. It's a gerontocractic farce.
by bediger4000
2/12/2026 at 2:58:24 PM
I agree with you, but I don't see these things as possible. Maybe the D party will enact campaign finance rules if they got a super majority. Given gerrymandering I'm not sure that is ever possible though.by bwb
2/12/2026 at 3:48:02 PM
People really need to understand the math here instead of listening to what politicians themselves self-interestedly complain about.The modern balance of power remains on a razor's edge and constantly flips because both parties have learned to run data-driven campaigns. That would be as true if neither party did gerrymandering as if both parties do as they do now. Whatever the district which is closest to being flipped, that's the one where they would concentrate their resources. If one party started to get significantly more than 50% of the seats and the other significantly less, the loser would change some of their positions until they were back in the running because getting some of what you want with 51% of the seats is better than getting none of what you want with 39% of the seats.
The actual problem is not the electoral college or gerrymandering or The Despicable Other Party, it's first past the post voting, because that's what creates a two party system. Have your state adopt STAR voting or score voting and see what happens.
by AnthonyMouse
2/12/2026 at 4:52:43 PM
> Have your state adopt STAR voting or score voting and see what happens.There have been ongoing efforts to ban things like ranked choice or other options at the state level and now it's being pushed federally (Make Elections Great Again act MEGA).
by esseph
2/12/2026 at 5:52:34 PM
Ranked choice voting sucks anyway, and that section doesn't seem to prohibit score voting. You're not "voting" for more than one candidate, you're scoring all of them; you're not "ranking" candidates, you're scoring them (and you could e.g. give two candidates the same score); you're not reallocating votes from one candidate to another, you're electing the candidate with the highest score.It's also not clear that bill is going to pass. It seems full of other things Democrats have a major incentive to filibuster.
It's not even clear that Republicans have any reason to prevent score voting. One of the failure modes of ranked choice is that you can end up with more radical candidates winning where one party already had a majority because it allows the majority party to run a radical candidate next to a moderate one, but then if the radical candidate gets more votes from their own party, the race becomes the radical vs. the minority party after the majority party's moderate candidate got excluded, and then the radical candidate wins. They saw what happened in New York and didn't like it. But Democrats should have exactly the same concern -- what do you think that does if you adopted it in the South -- and in general ranked choice makes polarization worse. Ranked choice actually does suck.
Whereas score voting does something else. If you run a radical, a moderate from the major party and a minority party, the moderate from the majority party wins because there is no run off election, they just got the highest score because they scored better among the minority party than the radical and better among the majority party than the minority party candidate. And when more candidates than that run, the most likely to win is the one that best represents the entire district, which reduces polarization, and that's to the benefit of everybody.
by AnthonyMouse
2/12/2026 at 6:21:30 PM
Notably, the party that has enacted laws banning ranked choice and any other option than FPTP in states where they have power? Only one: Republican.by FireBeyond
2/12/2026 at 6:35:42 PM
Missouri banned RCV via ballot measure. Alaska is a deep red state that has RCV and rejected a ballot measure to remove it.And RCV still sucks. Let them ban that one and use the better one.
by AnthonyMouse
2/12/2026 at 7:19:04 PM
Hold up.> Missouri banned RCV via ballot measure.
That's true, but it's not honest. What actually happened is there were TWO parts to it.
The first part, which is the part people actually read:
> "The amendment also changes a line in the Missouri Constitution to specify that “only” U.S. citizens have the right to vote, rather than “all” U.S. citizens."
The second part banned rank voice voting.
Nobody, I mean nobody read the second part.
The first part of the ballot measure was _already illegal_. It was simply used as a tool to scare people into voting against rank choice voting.
At least one place in Alaska, I think two boroughs, have local laws that allow RCV.
by esseph
2/12/2026 at 2:53:00 PM
Look around at the politics of the majority of countries on the planet. Voters being in pain doesn't mean they suddenly start making the right choice. Quite the opposite in fact.There's a long way to go on the path the USA is currently on. Ask anyone from India or Russia or Argentina or Egypt or Nigeria how democracy actually works.
by paxys
2/12/2026 at 2:57:21 PM
Sometimes they do, but yes, I am worried about the flip side as well.by bwb
2/12/2026 at 2:05:47 PM
The electorate does give control but they get bored after a few years and want to wreck everything all over again. It's goldfish levels of political memory in this country.by Veliladon
2/12/2026 at 2:49:45 PM
It’s not just the incompetence, it’s the meanness. If this administration were simply incompetent, it would be bad but not alarming or scary. It’s the fact that they want to hurt a portion of the population that worries me greatly.by kenjackson
2/12/2026 at 2:27:36 PM
There have been competent Republican administrations. Take for example Eisenhower. Or Nixon who won the cold war with his China switch.But the GOP turned into the MAGA cult.
by expedition32
2/12/2026 at 6:28:49 PM
I mean Eisenhower was the Republican President immediately leading up to LBJ signing the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts in 64-65 (i.e. the inflection point of the D/R "switch") and would realistically be considered a Democrat president:- Accepted the New Deal
- Championed the Interstate Highway system (massive federal spending)
- Pushed for higher marginal tax rates
- Supported a regulated mixed economy
- Warned against the military-industrial complex.
by FireBeyond
2/12/2026 at 2:28:32 PM
A lot of effort under Biden was to make diinformation a big push and they offloaded work to third parties, so I'd be curious to know how many of the firings or resignations came from the government being pulled away from censorship in league with social media as opposed to losing harscore cybersecurity professionals. Makes me want to jump back on the cybersecurity bandwagon. I think the the CISA and NSA mandate for memory-safe software roadmap is good. I'm more of a SPARK 2014 fan than Rust, but I think by 2027, I'll shift to 30% focus on Rust and see where the government contracts go. I'm building a high-integrity secure, mostly formally verified automation and controls software for a state-of-the-art portable hoist able to function in aerospace that I am also co-engineering with my partner inventor.by eggy
2/12/2026 at 3:47:40 PM
> the government being pulled away from censorship in league with social mediaThe right sure said that a lot, but it repeatedly failed to materialize. The twitter files were especially embarrassing, where Elon alleged government censorship but his "detective" was forced to admit that it didn't exist. Oops!
> [@mtaibbi] Although several sources recalled hearing about a “general” warning from federal law enforcement that summer about possible foreign hacks, there’s no evidence - that I've seen - of any government involvement in the laptop story. In fact, that might have been the problem...
Contrast this to "we can do it the easy way or the hard way" from the current administration. Yikes!
by smallmancontrov
2/12/2026 at 2:38:36 PM
The last government contracting I observed was in Swift and TypeScript, of all things.by trollbridge
2/12/2026 at 4:21:26 PM
> I get the army drilled this stance into youNah, this didn't come from there.
by esseph