Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 16th Jan 2012 19:33 UTC
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RE[6]: The negative attention was from the whitehouse too
by sbergman27 on Tue 17th Jan 2012 00:02
in reply to "RE[5]: The negative attention was from the whitehouse too"
Didn't you just confirm my point though? Politicians in the US will dilute their positions so much they lose all meaning.
Again, those are two points. US politicians will dilute their positions. Which is a different claim than that the statements carry no meaning.
Granted, the situation is not at all satisfactory. But it may well be the optimal strategy for the good guys in our highly *suboptimal* context. Unfortunately, the same strategy is also probably best for the bad guys.
In an abstract way, you are asking if I have any idea what an ultimate solution to our situation might be. (i.e. How can a more straight-forward way someday be made to be the optimal strategy?)
Opinionated as I may be on certain topics, I do not have definite suggestions on this one. I can tell you that I think it has more to do with the educational levels of the Sally and Bob high school graduates (or non-graduates) one meets on the streets than with Dr. Sullivan and Dr. Roberts. I can tell you that the relative ignorance of Sally's and Bob's children are likely to pack a far more deadly punch for my country in the coming decades.
But beyond really high level, birds eye appraisals which involve nebulous terms like "complacent", "fat and lazy", and "internal rot", I can't really even point to a definite cause. Let alone a proposed solution. One thing I'm reasonably sure of is that, by and large, I don't think public school system teachers, themselves, are to blame.
Tying this back into the SOPA topic, I will say that the only hope that I see for the US rests squarely with the Internet as a conduit for cheap continuing education on all levels From youth to adult. And from formal to somewhat less formal.
It is absolutely critical that the Internet remain as healthy as possible. And that, of course, goes for the entire World as well as for the US. It's just that the US is in more desperate need than some nations.
-Steve
Edited 2012-01-17 00:04 UTC




Member since:
2005-06-29
Didn't you just confirm my point though? Politicians in the US will dilute their positions so much they lose all meaning.
You are right though. We have 8 parties in our 150 seat parliament, allowing parties to be true to their idealogies.
Edited 2012-01-16 23:25 UTC