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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna

Anonymous asked:

Unrelated to you; was just venting because I figured you'd understand.

The ambiguity is why half the responses were jokes, really.

I haven’t encountered much in the way of people that seemed too much like broken mirror detailed satires of what I believe, at least not for the past few years.

There are probably people out there that are like versions of that for what I believed at 18.

anons asks politics

Anonymous asked:

Current feeling: the slow-onset realization that a well-written insight porn blog vaguely in line with your ideology is in fact in a quantum superposition of passing and failing the Intellectual Turing Test: either they're legitimate, but they're literally insane and believe in a fundamentally broken and incomplete version of your ideology, or they are a hatefully-but-painstakingly-crafted satirical troll persona of someone on the opposite end of the ideological spectrum from you.

Pick the response you prefer the best:

You see, that’s the secret, anon, my dear.  We all believe in fundamentally broken and incomplete versions of ideology, for we are all broken and incomplete people.  As for those fortune favors, we heal our wounds with gold.


If this blog is of a broken and insane version of an ideology, just what ideology is its complete spiritual whole?


A-are you @mailadreapta?? I-Is this about @wrathofgnon??

I’m not WrathOfGnon, I swear!


I have valid release forms for all the models that appear in my insight porn blog.

My lawyer has advised me not to say any more on the matter.


Weaponizing the Statue of Liberty as a political policy is just a discourse lightning rod to distract the Media while the real work of altering zoning laws at the national level is undertaken.  Also remember to check for the #shtpost tag on any post on this blog.


At any rate, I lack the energy to craft an entire blog out of spite.  Usually, on an emotional level, I take anyone seriously until they piss me off enough, at which point I just don’t care about their opinions anymore.  Grudges take too much energy.

anons asks politics victory for national technocracy

Anonymous asked:

Assuming I can shatter China, too (for the sake of sidestepping questions of likelihood-of-success, let's make that "assuming I can shatter China *first*"), any objection to me cracking the US into a few more drownable-in-a-bathtub sized chunks?

Drownable-in-a-bathtub is too small for any reasonable national government, but setting that aside…

How perceptive.

That the dominant hegemony is a democratic republic founded on liberal and enlightenment values, human rights, and democracy as ideology has some advantages.  For instance, it likely plays a part in just about every autocrat having to pretend to democratic legitimacy.  But those advantages are pretty intangible, so we’ll set those aside as well.

And let’s assume a breakup of Russia and India as well.

Sometimes I oppose things not just because I disagree with them on values, but because I think they won’t even work for the stated goal.  (Doesn’t everyone?)  So a lot of the opposition to American power wants to supplant America with Communism, or Anarchism, or smash it to bits, or dissolve it into global capitalism, or install a world government.

And while often this is based on ideological values about how people should live,

it’s also based on “OH FUCK GEORGE BUSH COULD JUST RANDOMLY INVADE SOMEWHERE AND NO ONE COULD STOP HIM.”

But while knowledge is knowing that America has hegemonic power, wisdom is knowing that that level of relative power isn’t entirely unique to America.  

So not only will those ideas, like turning America Communist, be undesirable in themselves, but they will fail to actually abolish hegemony.  They won’t even work for that stated purpose that was supposed to justify such a radical course of action.

For someone like me, this is a terrible deal.

So as long as anyone else has a continent-spanning superstate, I and the other American nationalists have no reason to dismantle ours.


But this question posits that a breakup of the other 9 million square kilometer nations has already happened.

At that point, I don’t really need a continent-spanning superstate.  It has certain advantages, but the pressing need, to avoid living under someone else’s hegemony, is gone.

And I’m willing to make weird ideological trades.  (I may be a lot less pro-immigration than most of the ratsphere, for instance, but there are conditions where I’d be willing to add all of Mexico to the United States.)

It may surprise you to learn this, but I’ve periodically thought about breaking the United States into a new level of “Regional Federalism” to deal with the increased political polarization.  It wouldn’t work as well as we might like for that, due to the primary divide being urban/rural, so some other designs might have to be investigated, but I’m not as opposed to the idea as some readers may expect.

So let’s suppose we take the idea of a North American Union.  There’s a sort of slider on a continuum of being more like a unified central government towards being a bunch of barely-connected separate nations.  We’ll put the slider more towards the latter.

The American states are too small to be effective countries in the way that we’d like, and many of them are landlocked - very unfair!  So we break America into 3-6 countries, based on the regions.  Each one has some coastline of its own (if 3-4 countries), or else, through the NAU, the Great Lakes Region gets prenegotiated access to the sea.  

This gives us a group of countries which each have a power level somewhere between that of France and that of Japan.  

Minimum military development spending is pegged by the NAU to some % of the GDP and is shared between all of them.  Actual militaries are individual to each country.  There is a mandatory mutual defense pact, and a military coordination center, but pre-emptive wars and the like are optional.  If Texas decides to invade Iran, New York does not have to pay for it.  Outside of this, minimum military % GDP spending is tagged to 2.5%, and NAU members can sue each other if they fail to meet it.

The US Dollar is not abolished, but becomes a basket currency based on the currencies of each of the new NAU member countries.  New currencies are issued for the new countries so that their economies don’t have currency problems like the EU does.

The official language of the NAU is American English.  Proficiency in English must be taught in every NAU member country.  There is no prohibition on adding other languages at the member country level.

The Bill of Rights is kept.

Other than this, since we’re looking for a dismantling, the power of the NAU government is pretty limited.  The number of representatives for each member country is not proportional to population.

For the individual countries, I think multi-party parliamentary systems might result in a bit less infuriating dipolar partisanship.  However, to be more decisive, each should have a President elected by Approval Voting.


That’s all pretty radical, and it’s more of a rough sketch than anything, but I am willing to make ideological trades with people that are primarily anti-nationalist because of things like the Iraq War - they’re just trades that no one can realistically offer.

Then again, by the mid-century, who knows?

anons asks policy politics flagpost tired north american union

Anonymous asked:

I'm the anon who sent the path to permanent residency ask and I wanted to thank you for your answer. I chose 'undocumented immigrant' because I wanted a neutral term that wouldn't get caught up in nitpicking the term instead of the policy idea; I actually do believe that nations are more than lines on a map. I see I should have considered my audience better though :)

It’s a controversial term, it’s just controversial in the opposite direction.

Of course, it would be far less controversial among most of the ratposters than it is to me, specifically.

politics anons asks

Anonymous asked:

What would be the impacts of a path to permanent residency (rather than citizenship) for undocumented immigrants?

I’m really tired right now, and should probably let this ask sit, but if I do the knowledge of it just resting there in my askbox, waiting, will nag me.

There are a few big implications.

  1. It prevents, limits, or slows attempting to subvert democracy by sabotaging (or ““sabotaging,”” depending on your morality) the immigration mechanism.  “Just bring in millions of people who will vote for my party” is a potentially exploitable flaw in conventional democracy which could, potentially, result in an unstoppable feedback cycle.
    1. In this vein, it dis-incentivizes political parties from deliberately bringing in “undocumented” immigrants because they have far less to gain from it.
    2. It also disincentivizes the immigrants themselves from coming somewhat relative to a pathway citizenship, although I suspect most are chasing money rather than political voice.
  2. It risks creating a long-term, permanently-disenfranchised underclass who cannot vote in their own interests.  This depends significantly on the implementation.
  3. Relative to current policy, it accomplishes some of the same goals as a pathway to citizenship, but changes the voting demographics more slowly (one generation vs more-or-less immediately).  So if you were hoping to reduce criminal activity and exploitation through naturalization, you could do most of that with permanent residency.

Of course, a major part of why there is illegal immigration into the country is because you can exploit them in ways that you can’t exploit the natives - not just because the natives can vote, but because people who violated immigration law have to stay under the radar to avoid potential deportation/etc, and so will have to be much more desperate before turning to law enforcement.

The businesses supporting this out of a desire for cheap and exploitable labor do not actually want these people properly naturalized, because then they’d have to pay them more, so they’d tend to just import more unauthorized labor.

It’s important to remember that a pathway to citizenship does nothing to stem the flow that caused this in the first place, and is thus not a real solution.  

Immigration cannot solve global poverty while the rate of new people created each year massively exceeds the capacity of developed nations to take them in.

Only developing the countries of origin economically, such that they are wealthy enough that people mostly don’t want to leave, can truly solve global poverty.

There are also other policy alternatives.

  • Issuing a large number of long-term work permits (8-20 years) based on the number of unauthorized migrants currently in the country.  This would allow some of the same effects of bringing people up to the surface, but without the same commitment as permanent residency or citizenship.  However, it is sorta kicking the can down the road.
  • Allow the individual states to issue a number of permanent residency permits proportional to their population, at their discretion.  I have joked about this, but it’s actually an option worthy of consideration.
  • Implement hourly wage-subsidies for low-wage American workers, but only for citizens.  While this is useful for the poor, and may significantly increase their negotiating leverage, it may even have some business backers.  Driving down the de facto wages for all non-citizens, who are not eligible for the subsidy, makes coming and staying far less profitable (and thus desirable) for unskilled labor.
  • Allow more immigration above current regular levels, but all of these additional immigrants must be sponsored and insured by specific American citizens/charitable organizations, including any education they may require to meet basic levels.  (aka “if you want this so badly, you pay for it”)
anons asks politics policy

learn-tilde-ath asked:

If you would, could you please say some thoughts (even yay/nay/mu) on this policy proposal? : When taking the census in order to determine the number of house seats for each state, people who the state has revoked franchise/voting-rights from (as part of result of being convicted of a crime) don't count towards the population of the state for the purpose of determining number of house seats.

This seems reasonable to me on first reading.

My late night tired concern is that the census might not update the house seats fast enough to account for changes in policy or something.

It could act as a pressure against the politicians to be Tough On Crime, or at least for them to use whatever means they can to try to strip their opposition from voting.  On the other hand, I’m not sure I want certain convicted criminals voting until they are, at least, out of prison again.

I may return to this later.

asks learn-tilde-ath politics policy

samueldays asked:

I sort of want to argue with you about your recent quoting of the Second Amendment, but first I think I should know with what mindset you're quoting it. Principle of extrapolation? Restriction to be worked around? Law? Representation of certain mindset? Something else?

Shitposting.

Well, not entirely shitposting.  

Let’s be honest.  That policy is not going to happen.

Most Americans don’t care enough about civil defense, the gun owners will fight it out of fear that lefitsts will try to use it to take all their guns, groups of leftists will try to use to take all the gun owners’ guns, and so on.

Yes, it’s intended to take a touch of the spirit, of a militia for defense of the country, the distribution of power among the people…

But mostly it was just to be a wacky compromise proposal under Nationalist terms to present what such an alternative might look like.  …if it wouldn’t be immediately expanded to try and seize the guns.  And for comparison with the Swiss.

Although I’m not joking that I’d like to see martial arts as part of high school curricula in other posts.

politics asks samueldays

Anonymous asked:

Do you truly think anyone is going to buy your nationalist hogwash? You blithering buffon, the dual monachy will never succumb to such seditious sentiment! AEIOU!

A monarch is nothing more than the crown jewel worn by the State.

Dual Monachy?  I’ve got anons inventing entirely new forms of government right here in my askbox.

anons asks shtpost