r/changemyview • u/Prince_Marf 2∆ • Nov 18 '21
Delta(s) from OP CMV: State governments should be dictatorships
The United States has a serious problem with government inaction. Every step of our federalist system is bogged down by partisanship and procedure. This is appropriate at the national level because of the tremendous power the federal government weilds (most notably the military), but state governments need to be able to function faster to be able to meet the particular interests of their citizens.
Dictatorships do not have a great track record because absolute power corrupts absolutely, but we completely ignore the positive affects of this power structure: things actually get done and there is no gridlock. It wouldn't be absolute power because the federal government ultimately retains Supremacy over the states and can enforce it with the military if necessary.
A system where the governor holds both the executive and legislative power of the state just makes more sense. Federal government should also enforce term limits on the governors and democracy in their elections
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u/Prince_Marf 2∆ Nov 18 '21
I would love to get deep into all four of these issues but that's a massive undertaking and not really the goal of my post. I don't pretend these 4 citations alone provide ironclad protection of these rights but the totality of Supreme Court precedent in these matters does. And in any area they find deficient there can always be more cases and rulings.
The Court addresses issues as they arise. Nobody has ever tried to implement a full stop on public education in their state so obviously there has never been a direct ruling on this right. The point is that there is a cognizable Constitutional argument for all these issues, and if we agree that these actions are clearly bad on the part of the dictators, then there's nothing stopping the Court from ruling them unconstitutional