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Rick Gore's avatar

“Don’t support Uber just use taxis instead!” was one of my first indications of just how out of touch a lot of the media elite was. In the US at least, taxis were (and remain) a convenient option in exactly one location - Manhattan below 110th street. Sure they existed all over, but almost nowhere else was there the density to support convenient roadside hailing - even in NY that was iffy in big swaths of Brooklyn and Queens. You were reduced to calling, figuring out how to tell them where you were (not always easy if you were out late in a city you don’t know well- a prime use case for Uber today) and half the time or more they never bothered to show up. Oh- and talk to an older Black person about how “convenient” roadside hailing was. My understanding is that Uber and its competitors have also meaningfully reduced drunk driving deaths/ injuries as well. Just massive improvements to many people’s lives but a certain kind of person finds them icky because some Silicon Valley people got rich.

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John from FL's avatar

Matt writes: "There’s no magic formula of growth-and-redistribution that ensures an endless series of electoral victories"

For all of the Democracy is on the Ballot rhetoric (some of which I agree with), the vision of the anti-neoliberal faction appears to have coalesced around a very anti-democratic approach:

1. Use regulations to accomplish what the legislature will not do. (Trust the Experts™, California banning ICE vehicles)

2. Implement those regulations through the actions of Executive Agencies.

3. Insulate executive agencies from the democratic process as much as possible. (see: CFPB original design)

4. Neuter the judiciary's role in limiting what actions the executive agencies can do. (see: the uproar over Chevron and resulting Biden SCOTUS proposals)

Legislative policy wins require the slow, tedious process of winning elections, compromise, incremental reforms and persuading voters to accept change. But for those who are convinced by the catastrophizing of the moment, incremental changes are too slow, too uneven and too precarious to leave to the democratic process. Trump scares me more than the anti-neoliberal left. But both are threats to our system.

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