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Yan Shen's avatar

Glenn, I'm curious if you believe that the entire brouhaha over the 2020 election being stolen is a deeper reflection of a deficiency in our national character. Whether in the domestic or international realms, Americans seem to possess a sore loser mentality. We're very good at gloating about being number one and feeling good when we're on top, but we frequently cast scorn and vitriol towards others when they outcompete us, denouncing them as frauds or cheats. I feel like other countries don't embody this sort of mentality to nearly the same extent. Maybe there's something radically individualistic and dog-eat-dog about American society that encourages this, but I'm skeptical that the kind of polarization that we've seen in recent years is sustainable long term.

What's been really fascinating about the fight over the 2020 election is how little legitimacy many Americans place in their own democratic system. Americans might not be generally aware of this, but in China, democracy in the form of one person one vote is fairly common at the village level. As political scientist Daniel Bell points out, Chinese governance becomes less democratic and more meritocratic the higher up one goes, from the village level to the national level where ultimately the CCP rules with an iron fist. Bell argues that interestingly enough, the level of confidence towards government increases the higher up one goes. For instance, many newsworthy instances of corruption in recent years in China have been at the local level, such as allegations of corruption by local officials in the construction of schools in Sichuan in the aftermath of the 2008 earthquake. By contrast, most Chinese tend to view the central government as highly competent, a few recent hiccups over zero Covid aside.

One gets the feeling that in America the opposite is true and that American views of government tend to decline as one goes from the local to the national, as evidenced by the generally angry and conspiratorial nature of American political discourse, with its frequent claims of the deep state and elections being stolen by the opposition. Anyway, I'm sure this contrast reveals something interesting about the shibboleths that we as Americans have based our philosophical worldview on, but alas I digress.

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mhj's avatar

Joe Biden won it "fair and square?" That is manifestly wrong and the only thing I need say is, "Hunter's laptop story was suppressed."

Let's distinguish "rigged" from "stolen." The 2020 election was indisputably "rigged" by the media, the FBI-coordinated censorship apparatus revealed in The Twitter Files and recent disclosures in the Louisiana-Missouri case, the abuse-ridden absentee voting schemes put in place in 2020, and other things. That was not a "fair" election by any rational definition. When such things go on in Russia we claim that is not a functioning democracy. But it's all OK here?

Was it "stolen" through illegal acts directly involving votes? Plenty of suspicious things but nothing proven in a court of law.

Rigged but not (necessarily) stolen. But "fair and square" is not right.

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