Nagelfar
Bluelight Crew
I thought I'd start a thread wherein people can share their views which incorporate politics in the manner of philosophical concepts: natural law, dialectical materialism, social contract, Plato's philosopher kingship type republic, et cetra.
I wrote something a few weeks back that I will start off by posting in part; the re-confirmation of my philosophical political position as a Federalist:
...To the American ear the name of Federalist implies simultaneously a devolved and evolved power structure, both centralization and decentralization. The difference between Federalism and every other political orientation is that, while they reject enumerating what they do not adhere to & reduce all constituencies down unilaterally to their own, being a Federalist means supporting the proliferation of ever more constituencies.
So does this mean letting everyone do their own thing? Isn't this just libertarianism or liberalism? laissez faire? No, for it is a official support of all retained selective retention of rules and coercive government practices within spheres of articulation and influence to the choosing of those who assemble under those pretenses. In fact, it would be the inverted opposite to libertarianism as communism is the contrasted opposite of libertarianism (between public & private spheres); meaning Federalism is not standardized deregulation as libertarianism is, rather, Federalism is regulated destandardization. Acquiring the benefits of refining man as a social animal in every mode of socialization as a polity; acquiring the strengths of every conservative viewpoint without the restrictive conventions of any one of them sullying the potential of all others.
An unconventional conservatism, that is liberal insofar as it is universal & free, even unto the degree which it sets its limits internally as determinate: even if unto the level of libertarianism or communism. Federalism is the supreme dialectical politic; concretely as well as empirically; being totalitarian in the manner of Panunzio & Gentile and anarchistic in the idea of Bakunin & Kropotkin; with the benefits of both the multiplying of strengths for the individual through the state as an infrastructure of confluent wills, and the voluntary self assertion of the atomisticly divergent will of a person spontaneously as meaningful and nonmarginalized in regard to any state.
Pillarization (the 'vertical' or non-territoral but ideological Federalism) is of course included in the sweeping use of the word Federalism, as well as consociation type developing states. If 'state' is understood in its Gentilean inevitability then Polycentric law, as an apparatus of statism in what the natural law & Hobbesians consider of a social contract that exists empirically considered, is also a form of true Federalism.
Federalism is the only constituency which accepts, and in fact affirms, all other constituencies. Every other constituency can do naught other than deny every other constituency by condition of its very existence; except insofar as accepting Federalism is accepting itself while appeasing all other demographics relegated to the ability to do the same without negating the other. Mankind has proven itself to be a political animal; well then, this is the only political politic; and therefore humanism par excellence. Majoritarian democracy is too mechanically leveled at simple standardizing for everything toward the most conventional and mundane, so too is every purely singular methodology to governance...
I wrote something a few weeks back that I will start off by posting in part; the re-confirmation of my philosophical political position as a Federalist:
...To the American ear the name of Federalist implies simultaneously a devolved and evolved power structure, both centralization and decentralization. The difference between Federalism and every other political orientation is that, while they reject enumerating what they do not adhere to & reduce all constituencies down unilaterally to their own, being a Federalist means supporting the proliferation of ever more constituencies.
So does this mean letting everyone do their own thing? Isn't this just libertarianism or liberalism? laissez faire? No, for it is a official support of all retained selective retention of rules and coercive government practices within spheres of articulation and influence to the choosing of those who assemble under those pretenses. In fact, it would be the inverted opposite to libertarianism as communism is the contrasted opposite of libertarianism (between public & private spheres); meaning Federalism is not standardized deregulation as libertarianism is, rather, Federalism is regulated destandardization. Acquiring the benefits of refining man as a social animal in every mode of socialization as a polity; acquiring the strengths of every conservative viewpoint without the restrictive conventions of any one of them sullying the potential of all others.
An unconventional conservatism, that is liberal insofar as it is universal & free, even unto the degree which it sets its limits internally as determinate: even if unto the level of libertarianism or communism. Federalism is the supreme dialectical politic; concretely as well as empirically; being totalitarian in the manner of Panunzio & Gentile and anarchistic in the idea of Bakunin & Kropotkin; with the benefits of both the multiplying of strengths for the individual through the state as an infrastructure of confluent wills, and the voluntary self assertion of the atomisticly divergent will of a person spontaneously as meaningful and nonmarginalized in regard to any state.
Pillarization (the 'vertical' or non-territoral but ideological Federalism) is of course included in the sweeping use of the word Federalism, as well as consociation type developing states. If 'state' is understood in its Gentilean inevitability then Polycentric law, as an apparatus of statism in what the natural law & Hobbesians consider of a social contract that exists empirically considered, is also a form of true Federalism.
Federalism is the only constituency which accepts, and in fact affirms, all other constituencies. Every other constituency can do naught other than deny every other constituency by condition of its very existence; except insofar as accepting Federalism is accepting itself while appeasing all other demographics relegated to the ability to do the same without negating the other. Mankind has proven itself to be a political animal; well then, this is the only political politic; and therefore humanism par excellence. Majoritarian democracy is too mechanically leveled at simple standardizing for everything toward the most conventional and mundane, so too is every purely singular methodology to governance...