Fred-Rick
2 min readJan 9, 2023

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A false argument, Benjamin. You pronounce a variety of things that are true indeed, but you are adding a falsehood to it.

Someone once told me that "Americans do not like socialists."

I asked her how she knew? It was quite obvious to her.

When people in the United States cannot vote for a party that represents their needs and political ideals, then we cannot say the things she and you are saying, right?

It is a false argument to cling to culture when culture is the (by)product of all that got put in the machine.

The machine dictates not what goes in, but the machine will warp what goes into the machine, per the machine's directions.

The two-party system is a machine. It is not based on freedom. Full and clear freedom was used to make this machine, and that full and clear freedom was used by an elite to diminish freedom for others (and then end up receiving the larger shares of society themselves).

While Thomas Jefferson devised the proper voting system, particularly the State powers that be made sure that it was not put in place at the levels where it should have been used: the State and the local elections.

The State powers that be turned the United States into a two-party system, and as we all know that this is not what the Framers had in mind.

Your words are not correct because you make an assumption based on the outcomes you see around you, while ignoring that these outcomes were not forged in freedom, but in a combination of freedom and (severe) restrictions.

The Framers gave us more (political) freedom than what we have in place today. Only when a nation lives fully in freedom, then can we declare the importance of culture. In the USA, we are not that lucky.

Thank you, Benjamin, for your reply. I am glad you think the provided information is right, but your additional comment is not acceptable.

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Fred-Rick
Fred-Rick

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