This is illiberalism. If we don't care more about the political system than achieving political power, the end of our republic is only a matter of time. #LiberalValues
https://twitter.com/SenMikeLee/status/1314089207875371008?s=19
@wjmaggos This is basically the federalist v anti-federalist argument. The federalists believed that so long as a government is representative of the people then that government won't become tyrannical whereas I agree with the anti-federalists in that a representative government can absolutely be tyrannical especially against groups and opinions in the minority. That's why the anti-federalists insisted no the addition of the Bill of Rights to the Constitution
But it was framed within an argument over whether to switch from the Articles of Confederation to the Constitution, where there would be more power vested in the national (vs state) government. The Bill of Rights was a compromise to alleviate their fears. I believe that making some laws/enforcement more difficult and placing different powers in different governments/bodies has worked surprisingly well.
@valleyforge
Maybe I'm over indexing on him being a libertarian and many libertarians not being fans of democracy. To me, our government should be whatever we want it to be, as long as it remains accountable to the people. I'm viewing "liberty, peace and prosperity" as his priorities but not necessarily "ours". Liberal democracy lets us continually figure what we collectively want most and can achieve together.