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Conor's avatar

I feel like the "issue" some people have with centralized power is that elections actually matter, and there's no getting around that.

Giving the executive the power to do stuff seems to be better than this current approach of no one accomplishing much of anything at all, or at extremely high cost crowding out other valuable projects. If there is a problem, then we can always turn the ship around, so long as it's set up so that decisions getting made are reversible (demolishing wildlife habitat willy nilly seems like a bad idea).

The general welfare and "common good" used to be often used expressions because people understood that oftentimes individual sacrifice would be needed for the community to benefit as a whole. That everyone was willing to participate in that meant that overall you'd win more than you would lose if we elect people of character to be in charge.

Getting your stuff done, and then making it impossible to undo by the next person is fundamentally anti-democratic. The better approach is to go after a policy so good and so courteous to the opposition that they can't help but not repeal it - Obamacare/PPACA being case and point.

Conflicts With Interest's avatar

Appreciate this take but feel the deeper issue is progressivism in America is hostile to economic growth on principle

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