Showing posts with label anti-democracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anti-democracy. Show all posts

Friday, August 21, 2020

Beyond Wishes and Dream states, there’s not a scintilla of substantive difference

Democratic and Republican: One party, one line

Democratic and Republican: One party, one line—Adapted from Andrew Gripp’s 2016 “50 Ways the Democratic and Republican Parties Are The Same.”

 

Nature of Two wings One bird Party

 

C

ontemporary Democratic and Republican parties are generally

  • Liberal (or neoliberal), pro-capitalist, nonsectarian (though ideological)
  • Extrajudicial: The Constitution of the United States does not mention political parties.
  • Neither of the contemporary major political parties existed at the signing of the Declaration of Independence.

The mid-nineteenth century marks the start of the contemporary Democratic and Republican parties.

“Political parties in the United States are dominated by two major parties. Since the 1850s, they have been the Democratic Party and the Republican Party.”

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_parties_in_the_United_States

 BOTH

Democratic and Republican parties

  • benefit from gerrymandering
  • thwart efforts to combat gerrymandering
  • benefit from congressionally mandated single-member districts
  • control the process of formally electing the president
  • discourage support for third party and independent candidates—despite consistent polling showing that voters are unhappy with their limited choice of candidates and want more options in general elections
  • benefit from strict ballot access laws that make it difficult for independent and third party candidates to contest elections
  • benefit from narrow dual party control over the presidential debates
  • view voting rights through narrow prism of what will benefit their members and candidates, or hurt the opposing party.
  • receive considerable subsidies from the government at the local, state, and federal levels
  • have altered their presidential nominating processes to protect their respective establishments to the detriment of outsider candidates

C

  • ontinue to rely on super PACs for support—even though a majority of Americans believe there should be limits on the amount of money independent groups can spend on political campaigns
  • remain highly dependent on lobbyists for campaign contributions and policy advice—though a majority of Americans believe lobbyists have too much power in politics
  • part of the ‘revolving door’ in Washington— whereby former politicians become registered lobbyists or unregistered ‘government relations’ consultants
  • are significantly wealthier than most Americans
  • have been involved in scandals involving the solicitation and acceptance of foreign money
  • have caused gridlock that has prevented the commission from enforcing federal election law
  • engage in obstructionism and contribute to gridlock in Washington
  • continue to win federal funding for "pork barrel" projects that benefit their constituents
  • have used the federal government to monitor and silence their political opponents
  • have used the federal government to monitor and silence their political opponents

 

B

enefit from ‘horserace’ election coverage that focuses primarily on strategy and personality

  • have a dominant presence in the media
  • continue [both candidates and parties] to deploy [negative advertising]— though Americans have consistently affirmed their opposition to negative advertising
  • have access to vast amounts of information about voters’ lives— through contracts with privately-run partisan companies
  • have supported taxpayer-funded bailouts—though highly unpopular in general population

  • provided business favors to political supporters
  • handed down controversial pardons and sentence commutations
  • contributed to the growth of the federal debt
  • approved policies that violated Americans’ civil liberties
  • have deployed American forces without a congressional declaration of war

Regularly claim to speak for, represent the whole of ‘the American people’— despite a significant diversity in American public opinion, a plurality of voters self-identifying as independents

WAR PARTY (with two wings)

Both

  •  recommend similar war policies—despite Americans’ split opinion on whether or how to fight ‘ISIS’
  • have similar war positions—despite a diversity in US public opinion on war against/occupation of Afghanistan, and how to proceed
  • present or hold similar ideas related to Israel and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict

TRADE 

Both

 

B

oast similar positions on trade, with neither platform embracing outright protectionism, or unconditional free trade

 FINANCE

Both

  • Party platforms avoid advocating drastic changes to the central bank’s role or structure
  • Support the Export-Import Bank (EIB), which provides financial assistance to American businesses

ENERGY

Both

A

void outright opposition to hydraulic fracturing (fracking) method of capturing fossil fuels—despite the public’s split position on the use

HEALTHCARE

Both

Party platforms fail to endorse single-payer healthcare system—though some accounts show a majority of Americans support a single-payer healthcare system

 US STATES 

Manifested party dominance

  • partisan officials, exclusively, oversee and administer elections
  • Democratic/Republican parties (in most states) control primary elections by requiring voters to use a single partisan ballot for multiple races—barring voters from selecting other candidates outside the Democratic or Republican party
  • In states without mandatory open primaries—dominant two (usually) allow non-members to participate only when (one or the other dominant party) is in the minority
  • National Party leaders (Democratic Republican) oppose opening primaries to non-members

VOTERS 

Partisanship, Party

  •  Identification with both parties on steady decline

P

ublic overall holds negative opinions of both major parties

Members of party 1 or party 2 harbor negative feelings of opposite (1 or 2) party

 

 

 

Sources

Gripp. Andrew. “50 Ways the Democratic and Republican Parties Are The Same. August 3, 2016

https://ivn.us/2016/08/03/50-ways-democratic-republican-parties-same/

At the time of his article, Gripp described himself as a New York City-based writer on American politics, international affairs, philosophy, and literature; a former political science professor; and a Georgetown University master’s level graduate in democracy and governance

 

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Friday, November 29, 2019

Better than tyranny marketed as “democracy”


True Choices, Studied Choices, Demanding and Ensuring Right to Choose

The citizenry duty of politics, that which is “of the citizen” (not of the partisan) should be engaged — NOT a game or sport.

  • STOP foreclosing outcomes, fulfilling prescribed prophesies.
  • STOP denying access
  • STOP calling sport (winners and losers) and laying bets
D
emocracy that isn’t

Ordinary Americans (the average Joe and Jane) — parroting what should be seen (and seen through) as round-the–clock manipulative mantra of politicians, commercial marketing, and mass media — brag about “their” (“our”) democracy.

Perhaps some Americans, especially the young and impressionable ones, really believe they live in a democracy— even believe the ludicrous notion that U.S. leaders and their partners are “exporting”  “democracy” along with “humanitarianism” to the “heathens” (terrorists, dictators, communists, socialists, whatever name leaders and partners choose to assign).

All of this is false. Every key word used to manipulate the masses (democracy, humanitarianism, heathen, and variations on that theme) is false.  

In no respect is the United States a functioning democracy. And this state of affairs is not alone caused by the manipulators. It is also caused by the sheep, Americans willing to be manipulated.

T
he United States of America is not a functioning democracy by any name — Republic, Constitutional Democracy, Representative Democracy — because those ordinary Americans (the lazy Jane’s and Joe’s, the distracted masses) fixated on personalities and pageantry, sport and superficiality have sacrificed, surrendered, given up or failed to develop and/or hone the discipline of critical judgment, decision-making and required rigor, the power of independent choice, and the inalienable right to choose.

A war party, a party of the status quo comprising two wings, Republican and Democrat, is tyranny—oppressive power exerted over the mind of the masses. In the American context, it is the tyranny of entrenched politicians, gerrymanders, plutocrats, their families and partners of convenience.

Having said that, perhaps what distinguishes U.S. tyranny is that we can break free.

H
ere is some of the variety that “Politics1” has compiled leading into the 2020 presidential primaries and general elections.
 
2020 Presidential Candidates and Possible Candidates (Do further research)

T
hird Parties with 2020 Ballot access in at least 10 states
At Politics1 with hotlink

AMERICAN SOLIDARITY PARTY
Brian Carroll (California)
Presidential Nominee
Amar Patel (Illinois)
Vice Presidential Nominee

CONSTITUTION PARTY
Don Blankenship (West Virginia)
Scott Bradley (Utah)
Darrell Castle (Tennessee)
Scott Copeland (Texas)
Rachel Davis (California)
Don Grundmann (California)
Colt Hample (Tennessee)
Charles Kraut (Virginia)
Darcy Richardson (Florida)
Sheila "Samm" Tittle (Virginia)



PARTY OF SOCIALISM AND LIBERATION:
Presidential Nominee
Gloria LaRiva (California)
Vice Presidential Nominee
Leonard Peltier (Florida)

GREEN PARTY
Ivan-Jan "Jivan Ivan" Desuasido (California)
Howie Hawkins (New York)
Youngstown School Board Member Dario Hunter (Ohio)
Dennis Lambert (Ohio)
Susan Buchser Lochocki (New York)
Robert Milnes (New Jersey)
Sedinam Moyowasifza-Curry (California) 
David Rolde (Massachusetts)
Ian Schlakman (Maryland)
Former Governor Jesse Ventura (Minnesota)



LIBERTARIAN PARTY
State Rep. Max Abramson (New Hampshire)
Congressman Justin Amash (I-Michigan)
Ken Armstrong (Louisiana)
Blake Ashby (Missouri)
Dan Behrman (Texas)
Former Rhode Island Governor Lincoln Chafee (Wyoming)
Kyler DePriest (Wyoming)
Keenan Wallace Dunham (South Carolina)
Souraya Faas (Florida)
Erik Gerhardt (Pennsylvania)
Evret Greer (Maine)
Brad Hartliep (Texas)
Jacob Hornberger (Virginia)
Heather Horst (Nebraska)
William Hurst (Alabama)
Cecil Ince (Missouri)
Adam Kokesh (Indiana)
Ben Leder (Texas)
Ben Layton (Utah)
Donald Eugene Lowe (Texas)
John McAfee (Tennessee)
James Ogle (California)
Darryl Perry (Texas)
Austin Peterson (Missouri)
John Phillips Jr. (Illinois)
Derrick Michael Reid (California)
Sam Robb (Pennsylvania)
Kim Ruff (Arizona)
 Sam Seder (New York)
Larry Sharpe (New York)
Arvin Vohra (Maryland)
Krista Whipple (Colorado)
Gus Williams (California)
Demetra Wysinger (Texas)



T
wo Parties in one
 DEMOCRATIC PARTY
At Politics1 with hotlink
Former Vice President Joe Biden (Delaware)
Former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg (New York)
US Senator Michael Bennet (Colorado)
US Senator Cory Booker (New Jersey)
Governor Steve Bullock (Montana)
South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg (Indiana)
Former US Housing Secretary Julian Castro (Texas)
Former Congressman John Delaney (Maryland)
Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard (Hawaii)
US Senator Kamala Harris (California)
US Senator Amy Klobuchar (Minnesota)
Former Governor Deval Patrick (Massachusetts)
US Senator Bernard Sanders (Vermont)
Former Congressman Joe Sestak (Pennsylvania)
Hedge Fund Manager Tom Steyer (California)
US Senator Elizabeth Warren (Massachusetts)
Spiritual Lecturer Marianne Williamson (California)
Entrepreneur Andrew Yang (New York)
OTHER DEMOCRATIC PARTY CONTENDERS
Michael Aguiar (Rhode Island)
Darcie Allen (South Carolina)
Jim Athans (California)
Sanderson Beck (California)
John Blyth (Illinois)
Kwame "Mayor" Boateng (California)
Jeff Boss (New Jersey)
Harry Braun (Georgia)|
George Clinton Brown (Nevada)
Ron Bush (California)
Johnnie Campbell (Iowa)
Willie Carter (Texas)
Mack Clifton (Maryland)
Cherie DeVille (California)
Michael Ellinger (California)
Ryan Farber (California)
Aaron Fraser (New Jersey)
Ben Gleiberman (California)
Rosalind Greene (Virginia)
Mark Stewart Greenstein (Connecticut)
Gidget Groendyk (Michigan)
Former St Louis School Board Member Bill Haas (Missouri)
Carol Hafner (South Dakota)
Vector Hasting (California)
De'Sean Hawthorne (Texas)
Tyrell Heaton (Minnesota)
Henry Hewes (New York)
Ami Horowitz (Montana)
Alan Howe (Pennsylvania)
John Fitzgerald Johnson (Ohio)
Robert Jordan (California)
Former State Senator Mike Katz (Delaware)
Bernard Korn (Florida)
Warren Lee (California)
Akiva Leffert (New York)
John Martini (South Carolina)
 Joe McHugh Jr. (Michigan)
Charleta McInnis (Michigan)
James Meroney (Texas)
Brian Moore (Florida)
Ken Nwadike Jr. (California)
John O'Keefe (Pensylvania)
Cecilia Okugo (Texas)
Stephen Patterson (Michigan)
Ashley Powell (Michigan)
Lee Newton Rhodes (Georgia)
Pamela Rocker (Ohio)
Shawn Rundblade (Wisconsin)
Cline Russell (Texas)
Doug Sabbag (Florida)
Ole Savior (Minnesota)
Fred Schultz (California)
 Ray Seney (New York)
Gregory Shadle (California)
Sharmin Smith (Florida)
Andy Ternay (Texas)
Luis Correa "Caliph of God" Thezion (California)
David Thistle (Texas)
Chance "Sheriff" Trahan (Alaska)
Ryan Van Bevern (Kansas)
John Washington III (Texas)
Raynette Kennedy Weiss (District of Columbia)
Robby Wells (Georgia)
Fred Wiand (Maine)
Kurtis Wilson (California)
Alice Yancey-Teague (Georgia)


REPUBLICAN PARTY
At Politics with hotlink
Incumbent Donald J. Trump (Florida)
Former Congressman Joe Walsh (Illinois)
Former Massachusetts Governor Bill Weld (New York)
Businessmen Roque “Rocky” De La Fuente Guerra (Republican Party primaries, Headquarters San Diego, California [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocky_De_La_Fuente_2020_presidential_campaign]
OTHER REPUBLICAN PARTY CONTENDERS
Robert Ardini (New York)
Walter Bannister (California)
Michael Bickelmeyer (Ohio)
Christopher Brainard (Texas)
John-Leslie Brown (California)
Joe E. Collins III (California)
Keith Davenport (North Carolina)
Rocky de la Fuente (Florida)
Mike Diggs (Arkansas)
Jeff Downard (Arizona)
Mike Fahl (Utah)
Tio Hardiman (Illinois)
Justin Harper (Utah)
David Herz (Connecticut)
Tom Hoefling (Iowa)
Augustus Invictus (Florida)
Zoltan Istvan (California)
Mario Jaramillo (Texas)
Arnold Jones (Utah)
Tim Kawczynski (Michigan)
Trevor Koob (New York)
Patrick Little (California)
Stephen Lyons Sr. (Maryland)
Jimmy McMillan (New York)
Scott Meek (California)
James Meroney (Texas)
Wanda Odom (North Carolina)
Cecilia Okugo (Texas)
Keith Ottinger (North Carolina)
Michael Palmer (Texas)
Adam Paul (Wisconsin)
James Peppe (Texas)
Michael Puskar (Maryland)
Jim Rundberg (Colorado)
Cyrus Sajna (Texas)
John Schiess (Wisconsin)
Keith Thomae (Indiana)
Sem Van Der Vegte (California)
Jeffrey Wharton (Minnesota)
Elfreda White (Georgia)
https://www.politics1.com/p2020.htm

R
on Gunzburger is Founder and Publisher of Politics1.com, first published online in 1997 “as a non-partisan public service to promote fully informed decision-making by the American electorate.” Gunzburger is an attorney, journalist, businessman, civil servant, “owner of the sole-proprietorship that is Politics1.”  https://www.politics1.com/about.htm



Selection and compilation

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