sycasey said:
calbear93 said:
Yes, the more government intrudes on our personal freedom and dictate obedience, the more authoritarian it is. Bigger government means greater control by authority.
I would argue that if said control came from a democratic vote in a democratically-elected legislative body, that is NOT authoritarian. That's just representative democracy. This is what AOC and the Squad are trying to accomplish, so they are not authoritarian.
calbear93 said:
Now, as to your four points identified by Juan Linz and summarized in wikipedia, I would have to argue that those are not really the facts. Nazi German had great amount of political mobilization (often vilifying the opposing party and finding scapegoats) and had clearly defined executive power.
I'm pretty sure Linz's definition means there is little mobilization AGAINST the ruling party. The ruling party itself can have plenty of mobilization against its political enemies. That would be authoritarian.
AOC and the Squad are not part of the ruling party. Their mobilization is against the current power regime (Trump and the Republicans). It is not authoritarian.
calbear93 said:
Let me end it here. I hate the view of government as the solution for our problems, with the government having to tell us and control of behavior because we just cannot be trusted with freedom. Yes, there are costs and negatives to freedom, but I believe it is worth it, and I don't agree that the government control more and more aspect of our lives is ultimately a good thing. Hence, I am more a libertarian than fascist or bolshelviks. Anarchy is just weird.
That's fine. I may not always agree, but arguing a libertarian perspective is perfectly reasonable.
I do not think it's reasonable to characterize the members of The Squad as authoritarian. Very little of their behavior fits what I would see as the classic definition of such, unless you want to stretch it reeeeeeeally far and wind up defining virtually all liberal/progressive politics and popular political movements as authoritarian. AOC and her crew are not authoritarians, they're just left-wing liberals. Maybe they're louder and more forceful with language than what you're used to, but fundamentally their actions don't fit the bill of authoritarianism. Authoritarians don't bother trying to build coalitions in Congress.
I am not sure I understand your standard, because by those standards, even Trump is not authoritarian.
Your first point: "I would argue that if said control came from a democratic vote in a democratically-elected legislative body, that is NOT authoritarian." Trump's power came from a democratic vote. So did Hitlers. That cannot be the standard, unless you are stating that only the legislative branch cannot be authoritarian.
Your second point: "I'm pretty sure Linz's definition means there is little mobilization AGAINST the ruling party. The ruling party itself can have plenty of mobilization against its political enemies. That would be authoritarian." Clearly there is huge mobilization against Trump. Does that mean he is not authoritarian. I think he is, even though there is clear mobilization, including attempts to impeach.
Your third point: "AOC and the Squad are not part of the ruling party. Their mobilization is against the current power regime (Trump and the Republicans). It is not authoritarian." Why are the Democrats not part of the ruling party? They have the House. Is Congress not an equal branch of the government?
Your final point: "Authoritarians don't bother trying to build coalitions in Congress." They are not building a coalition. They are bullying their way with their twitter followers. That was the whole point Pelosi was making. They were using their twitter followers to bully and shame people into adopting their policy when they only had, at the end of the day, four votes. How is that coalition building? Four loud voices bullying and shaming through allegations of racism (really, we are calling Pelosi racist?).
I think Trump is exhibiting authoritarianism by using his power at the cost of freedom. But based on your standards, he is not. The standards have to be wrong and we should just stick with the definition instead of some made-up elements.