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John Bolt's avatar

I appreciate the core of your idea very much and found myself thinking on the faceless authoritarian structure of our workplaces while listening to Alexis de Tocqueville’s “Democracy in America” earlier tonight.

In it, he spends a good deal of space describing antebellum America’s political institutions, how their “devolution” of powers to smaller and smaller constituencies enables and incentivizes the common citizen to engage in their self-government. The small local government is one accessible to all, easier to shape as an individual, and to be recognized by for service to one’s community. Whatever the effects of distributed governmental power on matters like economic growth (I would wager they are good), it importantly confers dignity on its citizens and provides them an avenue for direct and visible self-government. The present-day preponderance of well-meaning state and federal laws may have damaged the system that de Tocqueville describes, but I think the lessons he draws may yet be valuable in understanding how dignity might be reintroduced to the American workplace.

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Ben Jones's avatar

I feel like you have woven a lot of wisdom into this post. Take the paragraph about being a capitalist combined with the following one about the need for rules. I like that you have broken out of the same old tired lines that the two parties (re)tread and found some common sense. Maybe as we leave that tired trail we can find some more wisdom in the woods. Thanks for helping us notice this. Looking forward to talking about it too.

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