Saturday, August 2, 2025

Fractured Ballot

 


Fractured Ballot

Framed through the combined lenses of Thomas Sowell, Noam Chomsky, and Milton Friedman, the 2025 election results reveal a critical misstep rooted not simply in frustration with established elites – as Sowell suggests – but in a profound failure to engage with consequentialist realism. Driven by a potent cocktail of emotional responses and a rejection of pragmatic strategy, voters, according to Chomsky, often prioritized tactical harm-reduction over informed engagement, inadvertently bolstering the very outcome they sought to avoid. Simultaneously, the allure of disruption, as Friedman observed, led many to embrace a boldness that ultimately destabilized established systems, misjudging the unpredictable nature of markets and global forces.  Ultimately, this confluence – an electorate prioritizing feeling over analysis, idealism over strategic coalition-building, and disruptive impulses over cautious assessment – created a fertile ground for the rise of authoritarian tendencies, demonstrating a dangerous disconnect between expressed desires and the long-term consequences of electing a leader lacking institutional understanding and driven by policies that fundamentally undermined democratic safeguards.


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