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Adam Gurri's avatar

Great discussion. For myself, I've come around to simply believing in liberal democracy, as the empirical achievement of the 20th century (with roots obviously going back further but the form as we know it really came to be in that century). There's also a pretty decent range in terms of what's been specifically tried, within that category, along a number of margins, including the ones you discuss here. Thinkers like Rawls and Hayek and other theorists can be helpful for trying to think about why some aspects of it are good or bad, but not, to my mind, for devising some ideal replacement that's utterly different from it. I've been reading a lot of Kukathas lately and he's wonderful for thinking through these things precisely, though ultimately his "archipelago" bears only passing resemblance to a full fledged liberal democracy.

I agree with you that contemporary "constitutionalists" seem to think that written constitutions are about taking things off of the table of politics, which is ridiculous. Part of this of course is just how impossible it is to amend the Constitution here. In my mind, it's simply a good thing to devise instruments for enabling long term commitments that you can get supermajorities on board with. It's just important not to make the commitment so firm that it takes an impossibly large supermajority to change. Most other countries with written constitutions don't struggle with this like we do, and individual States have changed the constitutions hundreds of times, and replaced them entirely more than once, in the same period that the federal Constitution was amended a couple of dozen times. It can be done. But we'd have to change the ratification process first.

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Thomas L. Hutcheson's avatar

I am struck by how FRAGILE the economic Right seems to think Capitalism is. It is a wonderful wealth-producing, poverty reducing machine that is very delicate and liable to be destroyed by an increase in tax collections from well-off individuals, a minimum wage, a tax on net CO2 emissions, or subsidized purchase of health insurance. Socialism is always just around the corner.

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