The crazy thing is that under the District Plan, the political influence at the level of the state onto the federal government wouldn't disappear. If anything, the district plan would move the target of state-level political actors from large-scale mobilization to delineation and articulation. The district plan would shift the influence of the state into constituting publics, IE choosing which redistricting plans could influence the state selectorate's powers over the federal government.
It appears that the "district plan" was killed by majoritarians in each state. Pure selectorate shit.
"The leading statesmen
of both parties, including Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, James
Madison, James Wilson, Albert Gallatin, James Bayard, Rufus King, Na-
thaniel Macon, John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson, Martin Van Buren,
Robert Hayne, Daniel Webster, and many others, supported a version of
the district plan. "
Madison wanted to pass "district plan" amendments, and a version of the plan passed each house in his time, but no one passed both together.
And the fuckiest part of all of is that the particular shape of that the US prioritized expanding the franchise due to the particular pressures of the Jeffersonian-Jacksonian coalition. If that coalition had confronted different institutional frustrations, or John Quincy Adams hadn't gotten distracted with anti-masonism, maybe the Electoral College would have gotten the push instead.
If you put a gun to my head and told me I had to defend one of these it would be the property requirement.
illegally downloading a book for my e-readers from Anna's:
- download book
- use it
downloading a book legit from Google Play Books:
- buy the book, pay money
- get an acsm. install adobe digital editions.
-by the time the install is done and activated, the acsm's expired
- get a new acsm
- editions crashes and won't let me transfer it to an e-reader
- get the deacsm and dedrm pugins for caibre.
- fix the ACSM plugin's dependency; its version-parsing regex assumes versions all match \d\.\d\.\d
"I'm not saying I'm a Gracchist. I'm just saying that if the logos structures the entirety of the Empire, it has to be entirely pervasive, and that means that the servile classes also have the potential to be internally governed by logos. So when I see these silly little barbarians trying to talk about the logos, an inner spirit that surpasses their bizarre ritual laws, I think 'Good for them! More power to you!'"
It's funny to imagine how virtue signalling would work in a political order that Nietzsche would tell us was unaffected by Christian slave morality.
The sincere answer is that stoicism introduced a slave morality in Roman society that was highly regarded among elites, but which sat VERY uncomfortably with the tendency of Roman elites to violently suppress slave revolts and populist movements.
Sympathizing w/ Christians probably let Roman elites signal slave morality in spite of this tension.
It's astonishing to me that none of the AIs are integrated with email inboxes. I'm imagining a killer app that can transform your inbox into a voice-interactive service you can talk to on your phone. Think of the way that an administrative assistant in 1960 would be able to give her executive the skinny on all the inter-office memos, even if he just called in on the phone: that's what I want.
Or maybe I need to be negative about being negative about being negative. What's the fucking point? There's no coming back from being negative about being negative. It's never been more over than when being over is over.
I'm considering becoming intensely negative about negativity itself. Just an absolute freak. A drama-llama who goes into hysterics against negative thinking. Catastrophizing every case of catastrophizing. We're never getting over this.
So anyway I'm proposing that in a profoundly enmeshed community, a "quantitative" individuation (I, me, and mine) might not be possible. Instead identity might be borrowed from a "quantitative" totality (us, we, and ours). And what is borrowed from the totality is a "relational" individuation (filial piety, role, and rite).
Mimetic rivalry in a differentiated kin group: "Mom always liked you best."
Mimetic rivalry in an enmeshed kin group: "Let's all scapegoat the Smith family."
Humanist interested in the consequences of the machine on intellectual history.