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Marios Richards's avatar

So, while it’s true that Presidentialism is objectively inferior (for almost everything except ‘regular, fixed changes of govt’), I think it’s a mistake to think of this as a failure of procedure/structure.

You kind of touch on it here:

In today’s partisan environment

The problem is the not the “partisan environment” - the problem is that the Centre-Right* almost everywhere is simultaneously failing in the role it’s held since ~end of the WWII - containing and rationalising the electorate that voted for the Radical Right parties brought about WWII.

Presidentialism makes that worse … because it makes everything worse. But it’s not the core problem.

Nor are any of the checks and balances.

Because they never, ever - or ever could have been - sufficient to constrain a Radical Right leader/executive faction.

It doesn’t mean those things are valuable - they are a visible commitment - like not stepping over velvet ropes in a museum - they are a prop which helps people perform and be seen to perform civility.

But they cannot actually enforce it. If someone breaks into the museum and steals stuff, you can’t fix it by putting the velvet ropes back in place.

Tldr; The core problem is not Presidentialism - or Trump - it’s the Republican Party that held - and still notionally holds - all the power of one of the two monopoly political parties in the world’s remaining nuclear superpower … but couldn’t resist takeover by a reality tv star.

And that problem is the problem of Centre-Right parties everywhere (and there’s no solution on record that doesn’t run through (i) Auschwitz (ii) nuclear weapons only on the liberal side).

Daniel Oppenheimer's avatar

AI laundering is definitely a thing. There are such powerful incentives to do it. a) there always needs to be an external justification when you tell people they're losing their jobs because no-one wants to say "Sure, I could have kept your job, but I chose not to, because I'd probably have lost mine soon if I didn't" b) there is a powerful Emperor's New Clothes effect among leaders of organisations about how they are making efficiencies on the back of AI; much much easier to say "yes, I'm doing it too" like everyone else, rather than "actually I'm not convinced that one can actually use AI to replace people". There are benefits to being openly AI-sceptic if you're a Substacker; there aren't any if you're a CEO.

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