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Bay Area cities, restaurants bracing for potential election-night unrest

Author: Reedx

Score: 14

Comments: 14

Date: 2020-10-30 23:11:40

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austincheney wrote at 2020-10-30 23:56:06:

Looking like the insecurity of a third world nation. I remember years ago one of my bosses telling me a major advantage of moving to the US is political stability, that you didn’t have to be in fear of your life/property walking to work because of civil unrest.

the_only_law wrote at 2020-10-31 01:11:29:

It won't happen this year I don't think, but I'm curious what would happened in an election as close as 2000 nowadays.

computerphage wrote at 2020-10-31 01:07:20:

Third world nation seems quite exaggerated to me.

gedy wrote at 2020-10-31 00:24:12:

“You can have whatever you have planned, but the people are going to do what they’re going to do,” she said. “In Oakland, the message is ‘this is not the America we want to live in, and gear up for four years of a fight.’”

I honestly am a little confused by people who state they are 'anti-Fascist', but then excuse rioting over.. results of a democratic election? What's the alternative?

dragonwriter wrote at 2020-10-31 00:28:57:

> I honestly am a little confused by people who state they are 'anti-Fascist', but then excuse rioting over.. results of a democratic election? What's the alternative?

The US federal system of elections _is not_ democratic, and even if it were, democracy is necessary for, but not sufficient to, a government which is in accord with the rights of the people. Popular tyranny remains tyranny, and its victims are no less justified in resisting.

Now, you can argue that the outcome these people fear would not actually be a tyranny, but that's a different argument than that your apparent argument that not submitting to a democratic output irrespective of its content is equivalent to fascism.

kanox wrote at 2020-10-31 01:34:56:

A functional democracy requires that all parties agree to abide by the result of the election and peaceful transfer of power.

Endorsing violent resistance is the opposite of that.

dragonwriter wrote at 2020-10-31 02:39:16:

> A functional democracy requires that all parties agree to abide by the result of the election and peaceful transfer of power.

(1) A functional democracy also requires a Democratic electoral system.

(2) A functionally-democratic tyranny is not better than the absence of functional democracy.

(3) But it's usually better than a functional elective anti-democratic tyranny, which is what you have when you have the feature you describe as necessary for functional democracy is present, but neither respect for the rights of the people beyond participation in elections nor elections on democratic lines are present.

So, yes, the condition you pay out is necessary (but not at all sufficient) for functioning democracy, but not in all cases (even where the other conditions for functional democracy are present) desirable.

geofft wrote at 2020-10-31 01:53:28:

Technically yes, but a functioning democracy requires that the election itself be democratic in the first place.

As a simple example, which has happened countless times in dictatorships: if Party X arrests all the candidates from opposition parties, then people who abide by the results of the election and the peaceful transfer of power from one member of Party X to another are in no way supporting a functional democracy. They are doing quite the opposite.

(And yes, as the other reply pointed out, almost all democracies in the world can point to their foundation in bloodshed. At some point you had to transfer power _away_ from the undemocratic regime previously in power, and they usually were not willing to be peaceful about it. Meanwhile, a desire to preserve peace in the face of a growing unsympathetic-to-democracy party who's gaining power for now through democratic means is the backstory of many of the times democracy has been lost.)

redis_mlc wrote at 2020-10-31 01:22:02:

Your post is conceptually correct, but unhelpful.

The problem isn't our election system.

The problems are:

- the Democratic Party keeps nominating very flawed candidates that shouldn't be elected. People like Obama and Biden accomplished nothing in their careers, yet are nominated to run for President of the most powerful country on earth. (The problems we're having with the CCP now are related to Obama's weakness in patrolling the South China Sea.)

- the Marxist rioters have no purpose in life, so could keep rioting regardless of who's elected. I doubt if antifa members and supporters even know what the word "fascist" means.

- the alternative the left is looking for is to replace the US constitution, which is the envy of the world and has worked for 2 centuries, with Marxism, with a century of failure.

- Republicans and the right, who have a moral center, are not rioting or cancelling people, it's the left, whose god is political correctness (a Maoist phrase.)

- the current college generation are fragile snowflakes who shatter when stressed, which is the fault of parents and society, but still a problem that feeds the riots.

geofft wrote at 2020-10-31 01:19:51:

Mussolini, the Fascist _par excellence_, gained power through democratic means and democratic elections (plus intimidation, violence, and marches, of course) - the democratically-elected legislature granted him emergency powers in November 1922, he got the legislature to change the rules for the election to grant a supermajority of seats to the plurality winner in June 1923, and he won not only that plurality but in fact 64% of votes in the elections of April 1924. Only at that point were the more obvious signs of a fake democracy implemented (such as making opposition parties illegal and having _someone_ assassinate the leader of the opposition after he complained about election irregularities), and even so, they retained non-free elections instead of getting rid of them entirely.

So I think it's entirely reasonable for "anti-Fascists" to not be placated merely by the fact that an election took place within a nominally-democratic structure, and in particular entirely reasonable for them to be skeptical of a nominally-democratic election where you can gain power through means other than winning the popular vote and where there are irregularities in counting votes.

redis_mlc wrote at 2020-10-31 01:29:08:

I don't think 20th century Italy is an apt metaphor for the USA today. European politics involved several parties, and the USA only two, so much less horse-trading involved.

Also, I haven't heard anything coherent from antifa, and they're not a political party, so not sure why or how to listen to them at all. I would just call the National Guard the next time they strike a match or throw an M80, which would prevent them from driving down the interstate to the next downtown. This is not a similar situation to Kent State at all.

human_person wrote at 2020-10-31 01:45:43:

I think this is happening all over the US.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.wsj.com/amp/articles/walmar...

mc32 wrote at 2020-10-31 02:05:50:

This doesn't make any sense in SF.

SF is as progressive as they come (bar Berkeley, I guess) so all your neighbors on average think the same way... but the idea of the agitators is that because people elsewhere didn't vote in the same way, they will inflict a wound on themselves because of that.

How does that make any sense, unless people have been brainwashed.

gamechangr wrote at 2020-10-30 23:59:27:

Is this only in the Bay Area?

wow_why wrote at 2020-10-31 00:05:42:

New York too

wow_no wrote at 2020-10-31 00:04:40:

New York as well

wow_no wrote at 2020-10-30 23:50:27:

Why

wow_why wrote at 2020-10-31 00:05:32:

Why?