People share some policy positions... even people considered radically opposed. So it's flat out ridiculous to cast someone as "anti-establishment" just because they're self-declared "anti-establishment," and then pick and choose a couple policy positions where someone might share with a predecessor and say "because of these points, we can conclude that Rubio is going to have a Bush-esque presidency." It further becomes ridiculous when their positions aren't analogous, and it borders on true absurdity when the positions are shared with anti-establishment, anti-Bush candidates like Bernie Sanders.
If we're going to take an immigration position and say it benefits the "donor class" and "big business" and that it means he's an establishment/Bush Lackey... then what is the explanation for Sanders and other liberals having a position analogous to Rubio's? The distance between what Sanders/Rubio is smaller than Bush-enacted/Rubio-proposed.
Surprisingly, I don't see anyone using Sanders' position to draw the conclusion that he's Bush reincarnate. The reason why is that the entire line of reasoning that secure border/amnesty benefits donor class is wrong, and Rubio is not supporting an "open border." Believe it or not, our borders become increasingly secure each year and there's almost a negligible flow (for a lot of reasons) of illegal immigrants at this time. All amnesty does is provide rights/protections for workers that are here while also allowing them to be accounted for and appropriately taxed.
If I get into the foreign policy thing in this response, it'll get to long. I'll hop over to the other thread for that.
It's obvious that you think the Bush comparison is unfair, so let's set that aside for now. How is Rubio's platform meaningfully different from that of the GOP over the last couple decades? He's making the same neocon arguments on foreign policy, the same neoliberal arguments on taxation (though with some gestures towards reforms that would benefit the middle class), and the same arguments in favor of amnesty and border control. That's why he's an Establishment candidate-- because he's advocating for continuity and the
status quo. He's not making a meaningful case for any sort of reform, which is major problem for people like me who think the GOP is pretty bad shape right now.
But I did. I explained how likening his immigration policy to anything close to Bush-esque is wrong. And to take it a step further, what Bush supported in 2006 is much closer to Trump than Rubio... he wanted to double the border patrol, deploy the national guard to the border, require immigrants learn English, etc. He did not support total amnesty. Ultimately, we ended up investing billions in border security and literally built fences in some areas (I saw them go up).
I shouldn't be in a position of having to do this, though. A professional writer should have the obligation to not-suck and provide specifics if they're going to make broad claims like that. And they didn't, so I don't have much patience for someone who claims Rubio's presidency will be a Bush 3rd term just because he has some similar policy positions in some areas. That's an obviously false premise.
You are the first person I've ever encountered who has argued that the Federal government currently has control over our borders.
Ever, and I read an awful lot on this subject. Suffice it to say, regardless of how many fences you've seen go up yourself, I remain skeptical that we currently have control over our borders, or that our political elites intend to implement something like a coherent immigration policy.
1. They Dems had the votes so didn't have to be bipartisan
So bipartisanship isn't necessarily a good thing; just a necessary evil when one side isn't capable of dominating the other. That theory doesn't bode well for the integrity of our republic in the future.
2. The R's were against any meaningful reform because Obama was for it. Who knows what it would have looked like if it was undertaken bipartisanly but to just blame the Democrats when the Republicans had zero interest in working with Obama and Democrats. The truth is both sides failed not just one.
So you've taken the measure of
why each Congressional Republican opposed Obama-care, and decided that it was merely due to bad faith obstructionism, and therefore it was OK to cram the ACA through over the objections of the duly elected representatives of half of your countrymen. Nevermind that it was a hugely polarizing issue at the time, that it was over-(if not outright fraudulently) sold, and that massive amounts of time, money and political capital were expended on something that turned out to be nothing more than, as you've admitted yourself, an (arguably) incremental improvement on a sh!tty pre-existing system.
The Republicans bear some blame for not having offered a plausible alternative to the ACA. But the Democrats bear far more blame for imposing such an atrocious piece of legislation over half the country's strenuous objections.
The problem with that is that states are interconnected more now than ever. If one state sucks at educating their population it will have an effect on the other states. If one state doesn't provide for their poor, those poor will go to another state that does. In the late 1700's and 1800's when travel was more difficult that made sense, now when the population moves so often, and travel is easy, I am not so sure. If we threw things back to the states, I think it would just become have states (Texas, CA, the NW, NY, FL and the NE along with a few Midwestern states) and the have nots (which would be most of the south, and Midwest, and a few other states). Not the most articulate ramble on my part but I need to get back to work.
So, no more Republic? If that's what you believe, try to rally the votes so the Constitution can be replaced with something more amenable to imperial centralized government. But roughly half of your countrymen are still pretty attached to this whole federal republic idea, so we need to hash this out lest we continue shouting past each other based on misconceptions of
what kind of government we live under.
I was going to originally post this but I rambled a little.
My problem with this is that you end up with have not states and have states. Lets say we throw things back to the states. Most red states will suffer drastically, while the many blue states would benefit. Do you really think it should matter if a person is born in rural Arkansas or NYC whether they have healthcare or not?
Does it matter that you were born into your family instead of one in central Africa? The short answer is
YES, because we're getting at issues that are central to your identity. The alternative is global-citizen, universalist Progressive bullsh!t that is utterly hostile to
Pietas and everything that is Good, True and Beautiful.
Or whether they have the means to put food on the table? or if the school is remotely competent? Where do you draw the line?
I draw the line well before our citizenry is so infantilized that the Federal government must step in provide for the needs of every individual citizen. Republican forms of government only work when they're supported by a virtuous, self-governing citizenry."Those who would trade liberty for safety deserve neither."
Perhaps that's why we disagree on so much. I want to live in a federal republic of mostly self-sufficient communities; you seem to prefer an empire under which each individual's basic needs are guaranteed by the imperium. Unless you're willing to redirect that political project toward your state legislature, I don't think there's any middle ground between our two positions.