Theme: Governance

  • “Q: How should we organise aristocracy today? Elective rather than hereditary?”-

    –“Q: How should we organise aristocracy today? Elective rather than hereditary?”–

    Meritocratically Rotating Hereditary. Of the families that will achieve it most will fall out of it, either due to exhaustion, competition, economic failure or corruption. Public service is ‘costly’.

    The fundamental problem is that only hereditaries maintain long term time preferences and capitalization where all politicians practice the tragedy of the commons. And democracy is the slow road to communism precisely because it’s an organized method of exploiting the tragedy of the commons.


    Source date (UTC): 2023-04-09 17:14:43 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1645113022329810945

  • That’s not the same as devolving social policy back to the states

    That’s not the same as devolving social policy back to the states.


    Source date (UTC): 2023-04-09 00:57:47 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644867167551209473

    Reply addressees: @Ian_Gibbs_0311

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644866488325533696

  • IS RATIONAL DISCOURSE SUFFICIENT FOR POLITICAL CONSENSUS, OR, FOR OVERTHROWING H

    IS RATIONAL DISCOURSE SUFFICIENT FOR POLITICAL CONSENSUS, OR, FOR OVERTHROWING HOSTILE IDEOLOGIES?
    (I pushed back too hard but you get the idea)

    –“The idea that rational debate and persuasion, not intuition and coercion, are what drive morality and politics is not only wrong,… https://twitter.com/curtdoolittle/status/1644803993640501250


    Source date (UTC): 2023-04-08 22:12:19 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644825526786293760

  • Q: CURT ARE YOU A MONARCHIST? Depends on the meaning of the term. A king/queen i

    Q: CURT ARE YOU A MONARCHIST?
    Depends on the meaning of the term.

    A king/queen is a chieftain(headman) that may be elected or hereditary. A monarchy is a king/queen under the european common law, christianity, and is hereditary. A Constitutional monarchy explicilty states the powers of all branches of government. With the present british monarchy the optimum power in theory though it’s almost never exercised: the power of veto/ascent over legislation and cabinet, the power to disband the government, the power to call up the military. These are ’emergency’ powers necessary to compensate for the folly and fashion of the people, and the tendency of governments to seek power at public expense.

    Under rule of law of the natural law as we have in the united states, and a bit less so in the rest of the anglosphere, we lack a ‘judge of last resort’, to appeal to when the political, legislative and court processes fail us – which they do. HIstorically we could appeal to the manor, to the shire court, to the city court, to the nobility, to the parliament, to the monarchy when we felt an injustice. Who do we have to appeal to now? No one.

    We lack anyone with the authority ‘outside the law in the restoration of the law’.

    We lack the intergenerational political ‘house’ of the Lords (families with demonstrated investment in the polity), and ‘house’ of the monarchy (demonstrated long term investment in the polity) and this leads to the tragedy of the commons where all politicians act as ‘renters’ rather than ‘owners’ and destroy civilizational capital.

    We lack the aesthetic of competitive excellence demonstrated by the monarchies that have made europe a vast open air museum, and without them progress toward favelas.

    So the ‘perfect government’ consists of rule of law by the natural law of self determinatino by sovereignty and reciprocity, a constitution of that law stating the sovereignty of the people under the natural law, a parliamentary house for each the classes creating market for the production of commons, including a house of intergeneratinoal families with demonstrated devotion to high culture, and a monarchy as the judge of last resort.

    We got most things right.
    But we were wrong about aristocracy.
    And we were ‘wronger’ in the enlightenment presumption of the virtue and capacity of the common man, and we entirely failed to grasp and account for the seditious nature of the common woman.

    Turns out that everything turns to a Tragedy of the Commons without a nobility and monarchy. And turns out that everything turns ugly without them. Because we are all incentivized to maximize consumption now, rather than invest inthe long term returns on aesthetics, beauty, and excellence.

    In this sense I favore rule of law by the natural law, by the sovereignty of the people within the natural law, the resulting requirement for concurrency in vote and legislation and commonality in dispute resolution (legal concepts you may not know and if you don’t it’s a tragedy of our system that you don’t), universal equality of defense via court, voting by demonstrated competency, houses of government for the production of commons, each corresponding to the sexes and classes, ensuring the prohibition on authority, and the requirement for concurrent consensus, with a hierarchy of means of personal appeal for injustice from court to monarchy, and a monarchy as the intergenerational defense of the commons, the people, and the state, with the ability to act outside the constitution and law in the restoration of that constitution and law.

    That’s perfect government.
    IF you are good enough people to have it.
    And that’s the reason for education – to make sure you’re good enough and responsible enough to have it, so that the rest of us who are, CAN have it.

    I hope this helps.

    Curt Doolittle


    Source date (UTC): 2023-04-08 22:06:56 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644824171958923264

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644817769756610560

  • Q: CURT ARE YOU A MONARCHIST? Depends on the meaning of the term. A king/queen i

    Q: CURT ARE YOU A MONARCHIST?
    Depends on the meaning of the term.

    A king/queen is a chieftain(headman) that may be elected or hereditary. A monarchy is a king/queen under the european common law, christianity, and is hereditary. A Constitutional monarchy explicilty states the powers of all branches of government. With the present british monarchy the optimum power in theory though it’s almost never exercised: the power of veto/ascent over legislation and cabinet, the power to disband the government, the power to call up the military. These are ’emergency’ powers necessary to compensate for the folly and fashion of the people, and the tendency of governments to seek power at public expense.

    Under rule of law of the natural law as we have in the united states, and a bit less so in the rest of the anglosphere, we lack a ‘judge of last resort’, to appeal to when the political, legislative and court processes fail us – which they do. HIstorically we could appeal to the manor, to the shire court, to the city court, to the nobility, to the parliament, to the monarchy when we felt an injustice. Who do we have to appeal to now? No one.

    We lack anyone with the authority ‘outside the law in the restoration of the law’.

    We lack the intergenerational political ‘house’ of the Lords (families with demonstrated investment in the polity), and ‘house’ of the monarchy (demonstrated long term investment in the polity) and this leads to the tragedy of the commons where all politicians act as ‘renters’ rather than ‘owners’ and destroy civilizational capital.

    We lack the aesthetic of competitive excellence demonstrated by the monarchies that have made europe a vast open air museum, and without them progress toward favelas.

    So the ‘perfect government’ consists of rule of law by the natural law of self determinatino by sovereignty and reciprocity, a constitution of that law stating the sovereignty of the people under the natural law, a parliamentary house for each the classes creating market for the production of commons, including a house of intergeneratinoal families with demonstrated devotion to high culture, and a monarchy as the judge of last resort.

    We got most things right.
    But we were wrong about aristocracy.
    And we were ‘wronger’ in the enlightenment presumption of the virtue and capacity of the common man, and we entirely failed to grasp and account for the seditious nature of the common woman.

    Turns out that everything turns to a Tragedy of the Commons without a nobility and monarchy. And turns out that everything turns ugly without them. Because we are all incentivized to maximize consumption now, rather than invest inthe long term returns on aesthetics, beauty, and excellence.

    In this sense I favore rule of law by the natural law, by the sovereignty of the people within the natural law, the resulting requirement for concurrency in vote and legislation and commonality in dispute resolution (legal concepts you may not know and if you don’t it’s a tragedy of our system that you don’t), universal equality of defense via court, voting by demonstrated competency, houses of government for the production of commons, each corresponding to the sexes and classes, ensuring the prohibition on authority, and the requirement for concurrent consensus, with a hierarchy of means of personal appeal for injustice from court to monarchy, and a monarchy as the intergenerational defense of the commons, the people, and the state, with the ability to act outside the constitution and law in the restoration of that constitution and law.

    That’s perfect government.
    IF you are good enough people to have it.
    And that’s the reason for education – to make sure you’re good enough and responsible enough to have it, so that the rest of us who are, CAN have it.

    I hope this helps.

    Curt Doolittle

    Reply addressees: @_Itsmrfoxy_


    Source date (UTC): 2023-04-08 22:06:56 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644824171614969858

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644817769756610560

  • No need for a strong federal government in social matters, or even local economi

    No need for a strong federal government in social matters, or even local economic matters.


    Source date (UTC): 2023-04-08 20:56:02 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644806330379583488

    Reply addressees: @Ian_Gibbs_0311

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644787874254954496

  • Coastals vs interiors COUNTRIES would lead to conflict. Restoration of sovereign

    Coastals vs interiors COUNTRIES would lead to conflict. Restoration of sovereignty of the states and devolution of the federal government to its original designs of defense, insurer, trade negotiation, and dispute resolution isnt a pipe dream. It’s just restoring us to our original condition as a federation of european states (of which there were hundreds at the time), with the federal government instead of the church as the judge of last resort.


    Source date (UTC): 2023-04-08 20:55:34 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644806209663295489

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644787049554165762

  • Coastals vs interiors COUNTRIES would lead to conflict. Restoration of sovereign

    Coastals vs interiors COUNTRIES would lead to conflict. Restoration of sovereignty of the states and devolution of the federal government to its original designs of defense, insurer, trade negotiation, and dispute resolution isnt a pipe dream. It’s just restoring us to our original condition as a federation of european states (of which there were hundreds at the time), with the federal government instead of the church as the judge of last resort.

    Reply addressees: @Ian_Gibbs_0311


    Source date (UTC): 2023-04-08 20:55:34 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644806209562705920

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644787049554165762

  • Bo, Not quite. That’s a sketchy half truth: 1) You are making the case for an en

    Bo,
    Not quite. That’s a sketchy half truth:
    1) You are making the case for an end to democracy, a restoration of parliament, and membership in parliament by demonstrated interest from demonstrated competency.
    2) You are presuming that emotions are something more than a calculation of gains and losses given one’s intuition of one’s relative ability and cooperative market value overlayed on the masculine predator, systematizing, over-time, political bais vs the feminine, prey, empathizing, in time, interpersonal bias.
    3) You are assuming that the only time we vote other than economically is when we are morally outraged, and that moral outrage is always explainable and either true or false.
    4) And you’re not proposing that this problem can be solved by (a) separating men and women into different legislative houses (b) enacting the prohibition of false promise, baiting into hazard, in political ‘sales’ just as we do in commercial ‘sales’.

    So you’re ‘spin’ here is only partly true: it’s true that people can be manipulated using false accusation of moral outrage, or false promise of moral good, or false promise we can violate the laws of the universe (scarcity, behavior, genetics) by social construction expressed as legislative construction. But it’s also true only because we make it legal to lie to them.

    And that, it turns out, isn’t very difficult to fix.

    cheers.


    Source date (UTC): 2023-04-08 20:46:45 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644803993640501250

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644447523560648704

  • Bo, Not quite. That’s a sketchy half truth: 1) You are making the case for an en

    Bo,
    Not quite. That’s a sketchy half truth:
    1) You are making the case for an end to democracy, a restoration of parliament, and membership in parliament by demonstrated interest from demonstrated competency.
    2) You are presuming that emotions are something more than a calculation of gains and losses given one’s intuition of one’s relative ability and cooperative market value overlayed on the masculine predator, systematizing, over-time, political bais vs the feminine, prey, empathizing, in time, interpersonal bias.
    3) You are assuming that the only time we vote other than economically is when we are morally outraged, and that moral outrage is always explainable and either true or false.
    4) And you’re not proposing that this problem can be solved by (a) separating men and women into different legislative houses (b) enacting the prohibition of false promise, baiting into hazard, in political ‘sales’ just as we do in commercial ‘sales’.

    So you’re ‘spin’ here is only partly true: it’s true that people can be manipulated using false accusation of moral outrage, or false promise of moral good, or false promise we can violate the laws of the universe (scarcity, behavior, genetics) by social construction expressed as legislative construction. But it’s also true only because we make it legal to lie to them.

    And that, it turns out, isn’t very difficult to fix.

    cheers.

    Reply addressees: @EPoe187


    Source date (UTC): 2023-04-08 20:46:45 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644803993485418497

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1644447523560648704