Depends on what time-scale. Sweeping changes all in one go would be asking a lot, and none of these are minor changes on their own, either.
RCV first. After that, everything gets easier.
Roleplaying as Decronym bot for a moment:
Acronyms, initialisms, and other phrases seen in this thread:
Shortform | Likely Meaning |
---|---|
VAT | Value-Added Tax |
IRS | Internal Revenue Service |
UBI | Universal Basic Income |
CPI | Consumer Price Index |
GDP | Gross Domestic Product |
FPTP/FPP voting | First-Past-The-Post, or First-Past-Post voting |
STAR voting | Score Then Automatic Runoff voting |
RCV | Ranked Choice Voting |
IRV | Instant-Runoff Voting |
STV | Single-Transferable Vote |
AV | Approval Voting |
321/3-2-1 voting | 3 Semifinalists, 2 finalists, 1 winner via rating candidates |
MMP | Mixed-Member Proportional (Representation) |
PAC | Political Action Committee |
CCC | Civilian Conservation Corp |
EC | Electoral College |
NATO | North Atlantic Treaty Organization |
EU | European Union |
US | United States |
SCOTUS | Supreme Court of the United States |
RMV | Registry of Motor Vehicles |
IIRC | If I Remember Correctly |
TF | The Fuck |
UBU | Universal Basic UwU |
I agree with most of these. Key differences that'd I prefer:
- Approval instead of ranked choice voting (easier auditing, simpler to explain)
- Get rid of pretty much all taxes, and replaced it with a land and carbon/pollution tax
- Mandate all companies be employee owned
- Abolish the stock market
- Ban on corporations from owning single family unit homes, every citizen capped to 3 residences, and all multi-unit homes must be non-market housing
- Massive public investment into housing construction
I will take 1 of those, watered down and neutered, and it would still make more sense than the landfill fire we live in right now.
Any time a budget is not passed on time, House, Senate and Presidential/VP salaries are cut to minimum wage until a new budget takes effect.
(I say "cut to minimum wage" because unfortunately the Constitution has been interpreted as dictating that their pay never be interrupted. It does not, however, specify how much they have to be paid.)
I think I'll add "abolish the filibuster" on v3. Senators make more money from their owners/donors than their salary anyway.
Where I'm from judges have to be picked by a list prepared by the bar of that jurisdiction, IIRC. That way you can't just get any barely competent idiot who happens to be a good party man as a justice on the highest court of the land.
I like almost all of this, but I disagree with merging the Senate and House as well as a VAT on luxury items. We already have tax on basically every transaction and the burden is on the consumer, that needs to change. What should happen is that all taxes on food items currently should be removed. I believe the separation of Senate and House, while burdensome and inefficient at times, really does an essential good for American society. We would fare much better if we had term limits and more than two (essentially one) political party.
Edit: I want to continue with strickening the UBI from this list as well in exchange for significanly improving social services to make sure that everyone is guaranteed food, housing, medical, and security. I get that income is important and some people cant work, but inflation is real and that money has to come from somewhere not just the ether. It would be better to create/improve upon existing social safety nets to make sure everyone can contribute to society in some way rather than just giving everyone money for nothing.
I'm wondering who defines "luxury items". I'd currently put a trip to the dentist and a car with under 120k miles in the luxury category.
Out of these, unfortunately the only one that even has a chance of being realized is "IRS does taxes for everyone", and even that is more like "IRS provides official avenue to not have to pay a tax prep service"
The rest of these won't happen without a revolution, because the people with the power to make these things happen all directly benefit from them.
Don't get me wrong, I'd love to see even one or two things on this list become reality. Any two would make a ton of difference for a lot of people. But capitalism doesn't like it when you benefit the average Joe, and capitalism always wins here.
Lots of good stuff here, and I agree with others to keep the senate. Abolish the filibuster!
Something something.. gerrymandering
Soapbox: You there! Are you tired of getting sand kicked in your face? I ask you: why does the US have public debt without public equity?
Public funding, subsidy, stimulus, and infrastructural spending should purchase public equity that can only be bought back from the public via surplus taxes. We don’t have to call it socialism. It can be capitalism proper. But it’s the people’s capital and labor being lent, interest-free. They should expect a return. Fair is fair.
It’s simpler and stronger than labor unions. There’s no collective bargaining for temporary compensation, no dues, no pickets, no fuss. The pension is paid from the start by public endowment as a matter of course, eliminating the underlying financial insecurity employers exploit. The free market is more free when poverty can’t dictate your fee.
And besides securing the future for so many people, it would change the way citizens see themselves and the world around them, the stake they have in their governance and economy, and would certainly reframe public discourse.
- National healthcare is clearly overdue vertical integration that would curtail inefficiencies and improve outcomes.
- Entitlements like UBI could then be ordinary financial vehicles, annuities of the ever-expanding public trust.
- National debt would become leverage for a better future rather than a burdensome inheritance.
- Conservative rhetoric would sound hopelessly plebeian against an owner-proletariat. Whining about unfair government handouts has no place where everyone is granted the same share of public dividends.
- Many large private interests that have historically gobbled up public funds would quickly see the public become majority shareholders, effectively nationalizing many industries that should have been long ago. In particular, many nonprofits would coalesce into the bonafide public works they should have been all along.
- It even allows the good intent of inheritance without compounding generational inequality, and your safety net is not contingent upon means testing or number of years working. Were you just born? Welcome. You’re covered.
Public equity unlocks the logical, humane, and sustainable version of capitalism in which every worker is vested and shares both the means of production and the value they produce.
Why do you want more than 435 reps? How does that benefit anyone? They're doled out in proportion of population.
And another one: push cities (by carrot and sticks, financial incentives and penalties) to change their layouts and designs to be humans first, 15 minute cities, whatever you want to call them. Pedestrian areas and cycling infrastructure over cars, mixed use building areas, let's get rid of the suburb rot. It makes it that people don't need a car and if you don't need a car, why have an expensive piece of crap that costs a fortune to use and maintain? Cars will still be allowed, because of course. It's just that priorities have to change. People first, cyclists first. Cities will become more quiet, people will walk and cycle more, they'll be outside more, healthier, happier, safer, richer, safer.
No more first past the post elections and so break the duopoly
Ranked Choice Voting? 100% approve.
Get rid of the EC entirely. The popular vote would work quite a bit better as a means of ensuring power is exercised with the consent of the governed.
Scotus and congress both desperately need oversight that is different from 'we oversee ourselves and find we did nothing wrong' when obvs. that doesn't work too well
Tax prep companies... I wish them a prompt and thorough viking funeral.
Fun fact about corporate power at the time of the framers: the colonists felt first-hand the abuse of being effectively governed by crown corporations and shortly after the founding of the USA, corporations were drastically limited in what they could do- for example, they could not engage in politics, they could not own other corporations, could not engage in activities not strictly related to their charters, had charters of finite span, and their charters could be revoked for any violations. If corporations are going to be people today, it's about damned time we started charging them with crimes when they commit crimes- and yank their charters if they re-offend.
One thing worth questioning: do we really need representative districts? Why not have at-large representatives on a per-state basis, with seats allocated to states/apportioned via census? It would be pretty hard to gerrymander an at-large system, I think
Way way way better than the first one!
The 50k and under untaxed I disagree with. It sets up for a possible scenario where those who are taxed get priority in policy. If you are able to be a productive member of society, you should pay taxes to support that society, and the infrastructure it provides.
Most of the others in the list I agree with or don't know enough about the case to comment
RCV is the best available way to elect the president (afaik), but for the House I'd use full-on proportional representation. You could use the German or the Irish models, both of which still retain bonds between reps and their districts.
If you could achieve 1 thing on this list you could do all of them.
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