Good Afternoon, Dave

Thank you for the Vito Marcantonio story. The story is not unique, but it is a good example of how political parties make rules and enact laws that give them a stranglehold on our political infrastructure.

Parties are institutions of humans. They function precisely as a thoughtful person should expect them to function; they put their interest ahead of the public interest ... always. It is amazing so few people recognize (or are willing to acknowledge) that political parties are profoundly anti-democratic.

For the most part, the commentary on this site concerns itself with gaining some form of representation for purportedly under-represented partisans. I suspect that effort is driven by the quest for power by those who feel they are disenfranchised by the present system. We would be better served if they sought the benefit of society rather than some subset of it.

It is unwise to continue to ignore the very obvious fact that parties, themselves, are the problem. In the United States, we have just watched, helpless, as our elected representatives placed an enormous burden on us and our progeny, not because of conviction it was necessary to do so, but because they were given 100 billion of our dollars as bribes.

How can sane men watch such travesties and not realize that the pursuit of self-interest, which is a very natural and important trait in each of us, is the force we must learn to harness? The notion that our government can be improved by forming additional centers of oligarchical power is ludicrous.

We can not, and should not, deny our own tendency toward partisanship. Instead, we must devise an independent process that includes all of us and harnesses our natural tendency to seek our own interest. We must make self-interest a tool in our arsenal rather than leaving it for others to wield against us.

Fred
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