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Something doesn't add up. Governments around the world aren't just failing at random. It looks too orchestrated. The elites are trying to abolish governments. Fact. In places like the World Economic Forum, the UN's development programs and private think tanks, they are already talking about post nation governance. A future where borders and politicians fade replaced by algorithmic management. Smart cities run by code, resources distributed by digital overseers. AI not just assisting government, but being the government. Open code, public servers, oversight by truth, not profit. Oversight? Nobody. Fact, the EU has already passed laws for AI oversight boards. Fact, the UN's twenty thirty agenda speaks of automated monitoring of resources and populations. The collapse of trust in governments isn't an accident. It's a setup. The replacement isn't democracy reborn. It's governance by machine owned by the same few who hollowed out the old system.

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The American people will not accept an unelected group controlling the executive branch. While innovation is important, public institutions like Social Security, Medicare, and national defense are at stake, and citizens deserve a voice in these matters. Elections reflect the will of the people, and just because one viewpoint wins doesn't mean we abandon democracy. We cannot replace centuries of democratic practice with a small group that believes they know better than the collective wisdom of the American populace.

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It is laughable to describe Davos as protecting liberal democracy or to label President Trump as a dictator. However, the main point is that political elites are part of the problem. They mislead the public on issues like immigration, public safety, climate change, and China. The average person knows that open borders and illegal immigration harm the American way of life. They also understand that public safety is a concern in big cities. Climate alarmism is causing more harm than good, and the Chinese Communist Party's practices are questionable. The next conservative president, possibly President Trump, will address these issues based on the popular will and scientific facts. Ultimately, leaders should awaken the lions within the average American and free individuals worldwide.

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Who actually runs the government? It's often not the elected officials we think. Recent events, like Biden's debate with Trump, reveal that decision-making power lies with a group of elite Democrats and figures in the military-industrial complex, not with Biden or Harris. This cabal includes influential individuals like Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, who benefit from ongoing conflicts. The administrative and national security states gain authority during crises, making it difficult for citizens to hold leaders accountable. Our democracy, meant to be of, by, and for the people, struggles when elected representatives aren't the true decision-makers. While the dynamics have shifted over time, the upcoming election presents an opportunity to reset this situation.

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The American people will not accept an unelected group controlling the executive branch. Innovation is important, but public institutions like Social Security, Medicare, and national defense serve the well-being of the citizens. The public deserves a voice in these matters. Elections reflect the will of the people, and just because one viewpoint wins does not mean we abandon democracy. We cannot replace centuries of democratic practice with a small group that believes it knows better than the collective wisdom of the American populace.

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The speaker criticizes what they call "clobalitarian misanthropists" who they believe are actually running the world. They argue that democratically elected leaders are just puppets repeating lines given to them by these globalists. The speaker claims that these globalists dislike democracy because it doesn't align with their desires. They use tactics like gaslighting and framing issues as health concerns to restrict fundamental rights and impose censorship. The speaker believes that these measures will not save the planet but instead lead to the abolition of freedom, democracy, and the enslavement of people.

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A small elite pushes its own interests, even if it harms the majority, a recurring historical pattern likely to continue. A major danger to the planet is technological utopia, which will likely work for the elite. In a catastrophe, scientists will build a "Noah's Ark" for the elite, leaving others and the ecosystem to perish. The elite are likely counting on constructing a technological "Mars Arc."

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There is an unknown group of "globalitarian misanthropists" calling the shots, not figures like Ursula von der Leyen, Bill Gates, or Klaus Schwab. Elected governments are merely puppets implementing their plans, which seems to be erecting a one-world government. This would transform free societies into a collectivism where individuals are malleable parts. The EU is a stepping stone towards this one-world government. Europeans would never surrender national sovereignty directly, so the EU institutions were created under the pretext of preventing wars. By relinquishing competencies to the EU, it conditions Europeans to accept a one-world government.

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Alex Kraner and Glenn discuss the idea that democracy in the West is largely a façade with real power exercised by an unaccountable oligarchy, a phenomenon they compare to historical patterns from Rome and other periods. - Kraner argues that while democracies are presented as rule-by-the-people, in reality Western nations exhibit a shallow democracy on the surface, with an oligarchy actually governing the system. This, he says, leads to crises, repression, censorship, declining living standards, deteriorating infrastructure, and endless wars, despite repeated mandates for prosperity and security from voters. - He cites empirical evidence and references a video analysis to support the claim that democracies deliver outcomes unlike their professed ideals. The same syndrome, he notes, has repeated itself across different eras, from ancient Rome to Lombard banking in Italy, suggesting a persistent pattern of oligarchic control under democratic veneers. - A key contrast is drawn with Russia under Vladimir Putin. Kraner asserts Putin did not exterminate oligarchs but “rounded them up and laid down the rules”: pay taxes, treat employees fairly, stay out of politics. Oligarchs were allowed to keep wealth but were constrained to a sandbox where the state runs the country and politics remain within established channels. According to him, this check on oligarchy contributed to Russia’s economic revival and resilience even amid severe sanctions. - He contends that in the West, oligarchs and elected leaders are effectively intertwined, with leaders subordinate to oligarchic interests. He points to policy directions—such as rapid social changes (LGBT agendas), perpetual warfare, financial crises, and energy policies— as examples of decisions that appear not to reflect the democratic will of the people. - The “expert class” is described as a mechanism through which elites impose policies (e.g., net zero, carbon capture) by claiming scientific consensus and complexity that ordinary citizens cannot grasp, thereby narrowing democratic control. - Tocqueville’s concept of democratic despotism is revisited: democracies can be vulnerable to oligarchies because of trust in representatives, expansion of the administrative state, and manufactured consensus. The danger is a paternalistic state that treats citizens as infants, while wealthier interests consolidate influence over institutions. - They discuss the perception problem: many people feel they cannot critique the system without seeming fringe or conspiracy-minded, though awareness is growing—polls, journalism, and academic work increasingly recognize that voting has limited impact on policy, illustrating the oligarchic influence. - The conversation covers the political consequences: populist and anti-establishment candidates gain traction (e.g., Trump in the U.S., nationalist movements in Europe) as mainstream options become less credible. Courts are used as tools to disqualify or sideline challengers, a phenomenon described as lawfare. - On the trajectory ahead, they contemplate whether Western society is heading toward pre-revolutionary conditions. Guardian signals include declining trust in politicians and media, the failure of the old narrative to enforce obedience, and growing calls to reform rather than escalate with new wars. - Strategically, they propose broadening anti-oligarchic reform by engaging soldiers, police, and other institutions to prevent a collapse into civil conflict, stressing that reform is essential to avert violence and preserve stability. - In closing, they acknowledge the paradox of liberal democracy: it holds strong ideals, yet its vulnerability to oligarchic capture necessitates clear understanding and reform to prevent cycles of debt, imperialism, and conflict. They express cautious optimism that, despite resistance, a shift toward reform is possible if more people recognize the systemic dynamics at play. Throughout, the speakers emphasize the need to reexamine Tocqueville’s warnings, understand the role of the expert class, and confront the entrenched power of oligarchies to preserve democratic legitimacy and avert future upheavals.

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Speaker 0, speaking in March 2024, argues for “deflating” the system. The core claim is that there exists a fake controlled opposition: illiterion puppets posing as opponents on each side, but in reality both sides serve the same agenda of totalitarian control and the controlling illiterion masters. The purpose of deflating, according to this view, is to prevent the fake opposition from being bribed or blackmailed, which would otherwise keep control of the narrative and shape of public perception. The speaker contends that in these large-scale systems there is no real democratic choice and there never will be. The proposed solution is to deflate the parasitic system. The transcript then references David Icke and a claim about Donald Trump: “David Icke, Trump doubles down on support for COVID fake vaccines and boosters despite outcry from conservatives.” The speaker questions Trump supporters, stating that “He was a fraud all along as I have said since 2016 and he has been leading you to glorious failure for the masters that own him. No politician is going to get us out of this. We have to do it.” This presents the position that Trump’s stance on vaccines is used to illustrate a broader pattern of manipulation by a so-called masters’ system, implying that political leaders are not the solution and that collective action is necessary outside the conventional political framework. The transcript also includes a claim attributed to Catherine Austin Fitz: “Trump put $10 billion dollars into a program to depopulate The US.” This assertion is presented as a sourced claim, accompanied by a prompt to like and follow and a source referenced as tumia.org. The overall narrative ties these points together to argue that both mainstream politics and alleged hidden forces operate to maintain control, and that true change requires deflating the parasitic system rather than relying on political figures or conventional democratic processes.

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The speaker discusses the World Economic Forum's push for a global restructuring, aiming to limit individual freedoms and sovereignty in favor of expert rule. This agenda, known as the Great Reset, involves decisions being made behind closed doors by a powerful elite, leading to mandates like banning gas cars, vaccine requirements, and lockdowns without public input or democratic processes. The ultimate goal is to model the West after China's authoritarian system, imposing changes without citizen consent.

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BlackRock, State Street, and Vanguard, controlled by a small group of managers, own 88% of global wealth and assets. They aim to control people and limit resources, while enjoying lavish lifestyles themselves. They believe they have the right to rule over others and view humanity as expendable. These powerful groups also control defense contractors, big pharma, and politicians. They want to dumb down and eliminate humans, as they see themselves as superior. Some individuals, like Klaus Schwab and Yuval Noah Harari, support this agenda. They believe humans are unnecessary and advocate for the end of humanity. This is a battle between the globalists and those who believe in empowering individuals and promoting freedom and liberalism.

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The speaker discusses the World Economic Forum's agenda for a "great reset," which involves restructuring the world and bypassing democracy. They highlight how the Forum's annual meetings allow corporations, government officials, and celebrities to plan and make decisions outside of public oversight. The speaker argues that this agenda aims to eliminate individual freedoms and impose mandates without democratic processes. Examples given include banning gas-powered cars, implementing vaccine and mask mandates, and closing schools and churches. The speaker suggests that the great reset resembles Chinese authoritarian rule, as it imposes decisions without public input or voting.

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A democracy is a political system where people choose their rulers through majority vote, giving them the power to make laws. In a constitutional republic, rulers are also selected by majority vote, but their law-making power is restricted by the constitution. The goal of subverting the American Republic and turning it into a democracy has been pursued through the manipulation of language. The founding fathers were concerned about the dangers of democracy and aimed to protect individual liberty. America was founded as a constitutional republic, not a democracy. The constitution requires a republican form of government, not a democracy. Benjamin Franklin warned about the potential downfall of a republic if it is not preserved.

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There is a small elite group that prioritizes its own interests over the majority of the population. This has happened before in history and will likely happen again. One of the biggest threats to the planet is the idea of a technological utopia, as it may only benefit the elite. In a worst-case scenario, the elite would have a Noah's Ark-like refuge while the rest of the people and the ecosystem suffer. The elite believes they can create this technological refuge.

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The speaker discusses the influence of globalist elites on world leaders, referring to them as puppets. They claim that these elites do not want democracy because it hinders their agenda. Instead, they use tactics like gaslighting and censorship to control the narrative. The speaker argues that the elites' actions are not about saving the planet but rather about taking away people's freedoms and rights. They believe that the measures being imposed will not achieve their stated goals but will instead lead to the erosion of democracy and the rule of law.

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The real power in government often lies with those not elected, rather than the president or vice president. Recent events have shown that figures like Biden and Harris are not the primary decision-makers; instead, a group of elite Democrats, military-industrial complex members, and influential media figures control the narrative and decisions. This undermines the essence of democracy, making it difficult for citizens to hold their leaders accountable. The situation raises questions about the functioning of our democracy, which should be governed by the will of the people. While the dynamics may have shifted over time, the upcoming election presents an opportunity to reset this power structure.

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Speaker 0: Tumia March 2024. Why deflate? Because of fake controlled opposition. Fake opposition, illiterion puppets pretending to oppose the illiterion puppets on the other side, but in fact both sides acting for the same agenda of totalitarian control and for their controlling illiterion masters. As such, they keep on fooling the people, hiding the most important truths and advance more and more the totalitarian control agenda of their illiterion masters. Why deflate? Otherwise, fake, controlled opposition will always be bribed and or blackmailed to effectively keep control of the narrative, the people's perception. So in these large scale systems, there is no real democratic choice and there never will be. What's the solution then? Let's deflate the parasitic system. David Ick, Trump doubles down on support for COVID fake vaccines and boosters despite outcry from conservatives. Are you getting it yet Trump supporters? He was a fraud all along as I have said since 2016 and he has been leading you to glorious failure for the masters that own him. No politician is going to get us out of this. We have to do it. Catherine Austin Fitz, Trump put $10 billion dollars into a program to depopulate The US. Please like and follow. Source, tumia.org.

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The speaker discusses the deep systemic and structural restructuring needed in our world, suggesting that it will require giving up individual freedoms and sovereignty to experts. They highlight how the World Economic Forum holds annual meetings where corporations, government officials, celebrities, and academia come together to plan and conspire outside of democratic oversight. This leads to decisions being made without public input, such as banning gas-powered cars, implementing vaccine mandates, lockdowns, closing churches and schools, and imposing mask mandates. The speaker argues that this agenda, known as the Great Reset, aims to make the once free West adopt a Chinese authoritarian model, bypassing democracy and imposing decisions through corporate-government collusion.

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The lust to control other human beings is a story as old as time. There's a very strong drift in the direction of globalization, of the ultimate centralization of control in the hands of unelected officials at supernational organizations. They want all of the resources of the world in their pocket. The bigger picture is that an attempt is underway now to collapse liberal democracy and replace it with global technocracy. This is a coup. They're saying we can control with rules. We don't need currency anymore. It's like an inverted prison. You are supposedly free to roam about, but everything you want to access is behind lock and key. The potential for social control is gigantic and potentially irreversible. All three strategies are built on the premise of a climate crisis caused by carbon dioxide.

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Energy grids collapsing, food systems stumbling, parliaments in constant deadlock. Leaders suddenly look incapable of solving even basic problems. That's not just bad luck. That's stagecraft. The elites are trying to abolish governments. In places like the World Economic Forum, the UN's development programs and private think tanks, they are already talking about post nation governance. A future where borders and politicians fade replaced by algorithmic management. Smart cities run by code, resources distributed by digital overseers. AI not just assisting government, but being the government. Open code, public servers, oversight by truth, not profit. Right now, the servers belong to corporate giants. The algorithms are written by private labs. Oversight? Nobody. Which means the people would be trading fraud governments for something worse. A control system you can't vote out, can't even see.

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There is a problem with our climate and environment, but it's not a hoax. The people claiming to save it are actually destroying it. They create weapons, cause droughts, hunger, and wars. Our food, water, and air are also affected. They call it a climate emergency, but they don't invest in healing the earth. They prevent the planet from healing itself. They manipulate our emotions to make us believe they want to help. It's the Hegelian dialectic, where they create the problem and offer a pre-planned solution.

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Speaker 0: Have you seen local news anchors reciting it verbatim, as if democracy is the greatest thing ever? It’s become a social engineering propaganda tool that democracy is the greatest thing ever. We weren’t founded as a democracy. This country is founded as a constitutional republic. Speaker 1: There’s a line from Sweatshop Union: if democracy is so good, why are we running all over the world down people’s throats? Speaker 0: Exactly. Spreading democracy by dropping bombs just doesn’t make sense. Speaker 2: The political apparatus is set up such that government is not merit-based, but private institutions select leaders on merit. What happens if, in the future, micro sovereignties are run by the most competent person rather than a personality? Look at Lee Kuan Yew in Singapore in the 80s. His government was compensated based on economic returns and performance. Singapore is widely regarded as one of the best places to do business and as one of the freest, most open micronations. Speaker 0: Let’s start with The Sovereign Individual, the book on the table. Difficult read? Speaker 2: One of the hardest reads, in my view. It’s dry and painful, with dismal subjects. Speaker 0: An eye opener—unplugging from the matrix. It’s an orange-peeling book and was written in 1997, about twenty years before Bitcoin. Speaker 2: It predicted the emergence of anonymous digital cash, i.e., Bitcoin. It predicted the rise of narrowcasting rather than broadcasting, i.e., social media. It predicted government use of a plandemic to reinforce border integrity when things started to get weird. Speaker 0: It was prescient. Imagine reading it in 1996. The book’s first five to ten years—how successful was it? Speaker 1: I imagine they’ve sold enormous numbers more recently. The book’s sales figures suggest a Pareto effect: 10-to-1, 15-to-1 in rankings. The necessity of a post-nine world has made the authors’ insights profoundly prophetic. Speaker 2: It’s a book ahead of its time. How would you pitch it to someone who hasn’t read it? Speaker 0: The easiest pitch is to tell them upfront that it’s impossible, font too, and that it’s dense. In a short-time-preference society, reading long-form is niche. The value is unplugging from the matrix; if you have the courage to unplug, this book will ruin your life in the best possible way. It’s the one-way door toward Bitcoin. Speaker 1: Would you suggest that someone with a strong Bitcoin understanding read the book? Speaker 2: Yes. The audio is easier for some; the density is akin to a Peterson-level experience. A few have read it and shared the same unplugging moment. The book’s central idea is that after a certain realization, you cross an event horizon toward a brighter future, where finances and sovereignty are rethought. Speaker 0: The book’s numbers show how compounding matters: if you’re paying tax or inflation on savings, opting out into self-sovereign regimes like Bitcoin or jurisdictional optimization can be transformative. The example: for every $5,000 in taxable income, a 10% compounded yield over a forty-year career costs you more than $2.2 million. The answer, as the book highlights, is to move to Bermuda or switch to Bitcoin, eliminating inflation’s tax on your purchasing power. Speaker 2: The analogy: a 100-dollar bill on the ground—someone will eventually pick it up. The book frames incentives as simple, primordial drivers: people seek the easiest path to preserving wealth, and Bitcoin creates a powerful magnetism toward sovereignty. Speaker 0: The discussion then moves to a digital future: the sovereign individual, information aristocrats, and the rise of digital nomad visas. In 2020, 21 countries offered digital nomad visas; by 2025, between 43 and 75 countries are inviting people to live there for up to eighteen months, bringing income and economic value. This reflects the shift toward the “digital heaven” where physical location is less limiting, aided by crypto finance, multisig, and portable wealth. Speaker 2: The concept of “digital Berlin Walls” and border controls is challenged by the rise of nomad visas, tax competition, and capital mobility. As the state’s revenue base weakens, micro states or micro nations question how to finance themselves; land can be sold or leased to new sovereign enclaves, while existing nation-states become more like a la carte governments. Speaker 0: The discussion then turns to Moore’s Law and bandwidth, and how faster processing and information flow empower sovereign individuals. As information becomes easier to transport, people can conduct business from Bermuda, Japan, or Florida with equal ease. That power accelerates the move toward self-sovereignty. Speaker 1: The rise of cyber warfare is a counterpoint: a single actor can strike on a scale once reserved for nation-states. This creates a need to treat citizens as customers to encourage them to stay, while individuals can also defend themselves with cryptography, multisig, and secure digital infrastructure. The book’s framework contrasts magnitude of power with efficiency: the transition from medieval power projection to high-technology, efficient defense and commerce. Speaker 2: The Luddites are discussed as a historical example: when a new machine threatened skilled labor, some resisted, but the Luddites did not riot against all technology—only against those jobs at risk. The modern parallel is AI and data-entry work: will the losers and left-behinds revolt against technology, or will they adapt? The answer may lie in new governance forms where governance is more responsive to the needs of citizens who are themselves mobile and empowered. Speaker 0: The conversation returns to “government as a service” versus the nation-state. Open-market competition among micro-nations could yield better service ethics, as governments compete to deliver what citizens want, when they want it. The book emphasizes that the market should decide governance efficiency, not centralized coercion. The nation-state’s cost of enforcement rises as sovereignty disperses, making it harder to extract taxes or project power. Speaker 1: The panel discusses the role of education and personal responsibility. Reading the Sovereign Individual remains a duty, but so does practical action: multisig setup, hardware wallets, off-ramps, and building digital sovereignty with practical steps. The speakers stress the importance of small, incremental steps: five minutes a day of reading; gradual exposure; and helping others gain exposure to Bitcoin through accessible tools. Speaker 2: The “orange pill moment” is repeated: once you see the future, you cannot unsee it. The book is a catalyst for readers to pursue self-sovereignty, not as a cynical rejection of government, but as a practical shift toward a voluntary, customer-based governance model in a world of mobile populations and robust tech. The speakers emphasize that this is not a call for doom; it’s an invitation to participate in reform through education, prudent financial choices, and deliberate, long-term planning. Speaker 0: The closing notes insist: read, educate others, and become the change you want to see. The conversation underscores three pillars: information technology’s accelerating power, the emergence of micro-nations and digital sovereignty, and the imperative to align incentives toward cooperative, merchant-like behavior rather than coercive domination. The speakers leave the audience with a hopeful vision: a world of decentralized governance where governments as “customers” compete to serve, and where sovereign individuals use Bitcoin to protect and grow wealth, enabling a future with less violence and more abundance. Speaker 1: If you want to connect with the speakers, you can follow them via their channels (noting their emphasis on privacy and selective presence). The discussion ends with renewed energy: fight for the future, protect your digital life, and explore the bright orange future responsibly, with education and preparedness as your guides.

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We've found that the World Economic Forum is pushing a super globalist agenda, attempting to create a new world order that undermines the sovereignty of countries and our democracy. This organization, along with the UN, is controlled by the same ideas and oligarchs. They're creating leaders who will be elected by us, but these individuals are not employees of their people. They try to control people by salary and offers, ensuring they are politically correct. They aim to maintain a global rules-based order and compact dangerous extremist views on the internet to minimize the spread of misinformation and shape a great reset, believing nobody will be safe if not everybody is vaccinated. This involves a deep, systemic, and structural restructuring of our world.

Interesting Times with Ross Douthat

Is Trump a Test or Triumph for Democracy? | Interesting Times with Ross Douthat
Guests: Osita Nwanevu
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Oito Wanvu argues the 2024 election exposed the limits of Democrats’ democracy-frame, as Trump won the popular vote. Voters pursued kitchen-table concerns and economic relief, not abstract democratic theory; Gallup found more than 70% doubted democratic institutions. Wanvu defines democracy as 'a system in which the governed govern' and invokes Lincoln's 'government of the people, by the people, for the people.' He names three hallmarks—political equality, responsiveness, and majority rule—and notes distortions such as an unequally represented Senate; Puerto Rico and 4 million Americans lack full votes. Economically, he insists we deserve a say over conditions shaping our lives: corporate decisions often affect us more directly than federal or local policy. The founding, he argues, is read as an oligarchic coup, with 1787 framed to empower a stronger federal government that could act directly on people and would be less accessible democratically than the prevailing order had been. Reform ideas include a national popular-vote plan via interstate compact, adding new states to the Senate, court reforms, and ending or altering the filibuster, linked to labor power through the PRO Act. The left’s radical aims—labor rights and worker voice—should connect to concrete economic gains rather than abstract constitutional theories. He rejects will-of-the-people rhetoric, arguing democracy is a contingent contest of equal voices. Charisma and mystique matter; leadership like Bernie Sanders or Zoran Mandani signals possible paths, but lasting change requires building a broad coalition, converting the middle, and linking self-government to economic empowerment.
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