pilowsky, on 2023-October-21, 22:19, said:
American politics reminds an outsider of a bunch of school children fighting over the last sandwich at a buffet.
So-called political parties command no loyalty to a platform and no loyalty to any internal party decision-making process.
People getting elected because "they seem like a solid person to me" is not a basis for successful governance.
The failure of the "Well they really seemed sensible when I cast my ballot" method of voting is well-documented everywhere outside of politics.
Michael Lewis has written numerous books on the topic.
When a US political party finally catches on to the idea that discipline and a strong platform with a sharp focus on the well-being of voters (economic and social) is crucial to electoral success congress will continue as the living embodiment of Plato's Ship of Fools.
I will go at this in an oblique way. I know it is easy to romanticize the past, but I recall a happy childhood and ask how things have gone so far off the track. Maybe the short version is this: Neither of my parents had ever heard of Plato or a Ship of Fools, but they lived responsibly and did their best to vote responsibly.
It's not just Plato and it's not just my parents. I was a 17-year-old high school senior when my psychology teacher, Mr. Tighe, suggested that I write my term paper on Freud. I asked "Who is Freued?" The text talked a lot about B.F.Skinner, I knew who he was, but if there was a chapter, or a page, on Freud I missed it.
I could catch and clean fish when I was 5 or so, I could operate the outboard motor when I was around 9, I had a shotgun when I was 12 and went hunting, I bought a car with money I had earned when I was 15 and rebuilt the engine but Plato and Freud were out of my mental environment. I knew who Pluto was, but not Plato.
Ok, a good childhood but what's my political point? In 1952 Adlai Stevenson was running against Dwight Eisenhower. My father belonged to the carpenter's union, unions supported Dems, my parents liked Ike. Neither parent could discuss political theory but there was a war (ok, a "police action", whatever the hell that was) going on in Korea and Ike was the guy to fix it. So my parents, and many others, voted for Ike.
The world is full of people who want to do the right thing but they do not spend a lot of time with political details. You mention Michael Lewis. I have heard of him, maybe I even read something of his once, but I don't remember. Think Taylor Swift. I am pretty sure she is a singer, possibly I have heard one of her songs, but I can't say which one. There are a lot of people that I guess I am expected to know something about but I don't. Still, I vote. I was a Stevenson supporter in 1952. I recall he was a governor of Illinois, but don't ask me for details.
There are a lot of good people out there who are pretty light on political theory. I think many of them are feeling abandoned by both parties.