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Originally posted by asperetty
Are you suggesting that states/communities can have their own individual currency, but all backed by a national commodity? That could potentially be a very devisive program, in fact, that is one reason why the articles of confederation were abolished. Originally this type of system was in place in the US, until they realized how the state could abuse this system and create imbalances in interstate trade. And to think that it would not happen this time around like it did then, well, it might be a bit too optimistic, and the only way you would be able to control it, would be create more federal regulation, which is what you don't want. Even when backing a currency with gold there is a high probability of corruption in manipulating the gold rates and the availability of gold, no different from what is happening with our silver now, and of course the international market for diamonds.
The state that produces the most would have a stronger currency, another trade imbalance.
That is not something you want inside a single nation...
But what to do with the central currency? That is the real question.
Yes we give the power back to congress, and back it with gold or something. But what happens in the time of war?
How do you build up a state's reserve? How would a state ever have a surplus of money to be distributed? The state never produces anything. How does it purchase from the producers within the state, so that it has something to back the state currency or to purchase/trade their state currency for federal commodity backed currency?
I am assuming that there will be some type of federal tax on the states as well, and that the federal government will be able to invest in things with state legislature approval?
Originally posted by asperetty
The problem is that wars can be fought in more places than behind rocks. We have planes and warships now. Somehow that is going to need to be defended against, and a militia of men with m16s still won't take down a single apache heli.
And wars are fought over more than gold. This isn't like Napoleon invading Russia with cannons and 4 armies equipped with swords and muskets. Defense is sadly a real issue that needs to be addressed, and is why the federal or state governments need to invest in something that can bring more tax revenue than what is created by the citizens themselves.
And its not just for defense/war, fed/state's need to provide infrastructure. The country has to be able to obtain more value than what it currently has as a whole.
Fed taxes are for investing or purchasing or trading in the international market.
Unless the entire US becomes completely sustainable on itself, you are going to need states and/or a federal government making money for the ones who aren't producing, and to enable production to grow. Middle-Age reforms just cannot work in this world. You would have to get the entire world to follow such a system, and if that is the case, we might as well let the country fail and become a state under the UN.
Most infrastructure would be at the State level, possibly ALL of it. I'm not sure how the country can "obtain more value" than it is able to produce without going to fiat money and writing checks it can't cash as it goes along.
Originally posted by nenothtu
Great OP. I'm on board. It puts things back to where they were supposed to be to begin with, and adds a new twist or two that wasn't available as a philosophical basis back then. Variety is the spice of life, and options + liberty can't be a bad thing. It's certain that if SOMETHING isn't done, what we have now can only get worse on both of those counts.
These notes pertain to the Federal or Confederation level, as the People of any one State ought to be able to determine how best to run their State.
One function I would add at the Federal or Confederation level which you limit to military and foreign relations policy (perhaps I read that wrong and those are just examples) would be mediating disputes between the States. Not REGULATING them, mind you, but mediating them. That could help head off some nasty little brushfire conflicts.
In the representative pool, I'd emplace term limits, say four years per, limit terms to only one, disallowing two consecutive terms, and enforce "downtime" between terms of at least 8 years (2 terms worth) to prevent representatives form making a lifetime career of corruption. and getting any one person too firmly entrenched in the body politic.
In the matter of taxes and budget, I would add a requirement to operate within available funds, NEVER running to deficit. Federal governments should not be allowed to run a bar tab and potentially break or bankrupt the populace.
Some of what I've seen here seems to assume that States would stay at their current level of servitude and helplessness, which would not be the case. They would re-take their rightful powers that have been eroded by the Federal Government over the years, so such things as military expenditures would be taken over by them, rather than evaporate into weakness and lethargy. I submit that the military would actually be strengthened, AND remain under the control of the people, since the view I'm getting here is along the lines of an armed and trained militia setup, which is by definition made OF the people, not a potential overlord for them, and is made up of all the arms bearing populace. Numbers ought not to be a problem. Foreign adventurism is eliminated, and that curtails a whole lot of military expenditure right there.
The rest of the world can then do as it pleases, but trying to do it on MY dirt is suicidal with 300 million guns pointed at them.
Originally posted by asperetty
reply to post by nenothtu
By Middle Age reform I meant feudalism.
But forget that I even said it.
I am convinced by you and Ab. The overall idea of freedom to choose is what this thread is about, and exactly what this country is about. Yes, you can have a communistic state, and I can have my educationalist state. You be Sparta, I'll be Athens, but together we are Greece.
What you guys are talking about is right 100%. Really, what you you both have said has convinced me, in terms of the federal restraints that limit it to its basic and fundamental operations, and the states rights. If one state is failing, then they can adopt another state's governing principles, whether it be economic or political, but that is the choice of the people of that state. My fear was that a failed state could result in discrepancies between that state and others, but even still, that is where the federal government steps in.
But if you limit the government to solely a large judicial entity, you are severely limiting the potential of the country, and that is my only argument. Then again, that is the job of a government, to mediate, not to control or even act unless it is in reaction, and I can't really argue further without contradicting everything I say.
It is free market society in every aspect, and that I can accept.
Also about the militia, I did not know my mom can buy stingers.
I was still in the mindset of having a national army, with the real weapons, while the average citizen had the left overs in the black market, with that market no longer being black. but I think it might be better that the states can purchase or develop their own military and can come together in times of war. Otherwise, there really is no need for a national military constantly on alert, is there?
In defense of my opinion that states or the federal govt should be able to make revenue outside of taxes, the way that this money is spent, or even where it is invested, is decided upon the people, always. If it is federal expenditure, then the states must ratify, according to majority or otherwise, whatever it may be. The point is that the states will determine where to invest and where to spend on the federal level, not that the federal govt has its own power to lend and spend. This goes for the state spending, the residents of that state need to approve where the money goes, and how the money is spent, or even if the state can do anything with the tax revenue at all. No governing entity has the right to spend money unless the people who are being governed approve of it.
I need to read. Can either of you recommend some books for me?
Originally posted by AdAbsurdum
Hey, you helped build it! I couldn't of done it with out our two week long conversation. I also agree about variety, "specialization is for insects."
In the representative pool, I'd emplace term limits, say four years per, limit terms to only one, disallowing two consecutive terms, and enforce "downtime" between terms of at least 8 years (2 terms worth) to prevent representatives form making a lifetime career of corruption. and getting any one person too firmly entrenched in the body politic.
I thought about this after we discussed it earlier and I thought that differing States may have different needs when it comes to this. Some may require longer serving members for continuities sake while others must cycle through quickly because they play a fast and loose economic game.
Some of what I've seen here seems to assume that States would stay at their current level of servitude and helplessness, which would not be the case. They would re-take their rightful powers that have been eroded by the Federal Government over the years, so such things as military expenditures would be taken over by them, rather than evaporate into weakness and lethargy. I submit that the military would actually be strengthened, AND remain under the control of the people, since the view I'm getting here is along the lines of an armed and trained militia setup, which is by definition made OF the people, not a potential overlord for them, and is made up of all the arms bearing populace. Numbers ought not to be a problem. Foreign adventurism is eliminated, and that curtails a whole lot of military expenditure right there.
Exactly, while this may be reform, the level of reform I am proposing might as well be a revolution that starts us from scratch. We are talking about hitting the reset button and returning back to the America pre-Fed with some added bonuses.
The rest of the world can then do as it pleases, but trying to do it on MY dirt is suicidal with 300 million guns pointed at them.
Yep, you'd have to be nutty to think invasion is a good idea.
Originally posted by nenothtu
I see you read Heinlein, who had some thoroughly interesting political theory of his own dispersed throughout his work
I'll have to ponder it a bit more. My gut says "not at the Federal level", because that would have some States entrenching potential career politicians to the detriment of others, and misdeeds at the federal level would affect us all. No problem with letting States run it like they want to internally, though.
And it's those "bonus features" that could allow it to work right this time. Particularly the feature that allows the People to say "not on MY watch" and enforce that BEFORE the next election cycle, which always seems to fall after the damage is done.
Our model simply won't work there. Not now, not ever. It should have been enough to erase the Taliban, and get on with living and letting live.
I've got odd notions about such things though. I don't see the difference between crossing the Afghan border to get the Taliban, and crossing the Pak border to get them where they sit as guests of the ISI.
Edit to add: it might not be obvious which "way" I'm referring to re Afghanistan. I'm talking there about the current US system which they're now trying to "help" Afghanistan with. To be honest, though, I'm not sure this new system would work there, either. They seem to have stumbled upon the only variety of chaos that they will accept already.edit on 2010/12/12 by nenothtu because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by asperetty
But forget that I even said it.
I am convinced by you and Ab. The overall idea of freedom to choose is what this thread is about, and exactly what this country is about. Yes, you can have a communistic state, and I can have my educationalist state. You be Sparta, I'll be Athens, but together we are Greece.
What you guys are talking about is right 100%. Really, what you you both have said has convinced me, in terms of the federal restraints that limit it to its basic and fundamental operations, and the states rights. If one state is failing, then they can adopt another state's governing principles, whether it be economic or political, but that is the choice of the people of that state. My fear was that a failed state could result in discrepancies between that state and others, but even still, that is where the federal government steps in.
But if you limit the government to solely a large judicial entity, you are severely limiting the potential of the country, and that is my only argument. Then again, that is the job of a government, to mediate, not to control or even act unless it is in reaction, and I can't really argue further without contradicting everything I say.
Also about the militia, I did not know my mom can buy stingers.
I was still in the mindset of having a national army, with the real weapons, while the average citizen had the left overs in the black market, with that market no longer being black. but I think it might be better that the states can purchase or develop their own military and can come together in times of war. Otherwise, there really is no need for a national military constantly on alert, is there?
In defense of my opinion that states or the federal govt should be able to make revenue outside of taxes, the way that this money is spent, or even where it is invested, is decided upon the people, always. If it is federal expenditure, then the states must ratify, according to majority or otherwise, whatever it may be. The point is that the states will determine where to invest and where to spend on the federal level, not that the federal govt has its own power to lend and spend. This goes for the state spending, the residents of that state need to approve where the money goes, and how the money is spent, or even if the state can do anything with the tax revenue at all. No governing entity has the right to spend money unless the people who are being governed approve of it.
But that does not mean that the governing body should not be allowed altogether to raise its own revenues...
I need to read. Can either of you recommend some books for me?
Originally posted by AdAbsurdum
Oh man... Everything Nenothtu listed I've read and can recommend. If you haven't yet, read Thomas Paine's essays. A lot of people have read Jefferson, but check out Paine too, if you haven't. Something I think you maybe very interested in is something called Anarcho-Syndicalism. AK Press has heaps of books about it and I think it will help you see a point where I am gathering my ideas. Above all things I recommend you read "My Word is My Weapon" and anything on Zapata.
That should keep you busy for awhile. Hehehe.