$ecular#eckler
Platinum Member
"American Experiment" is probably dismissed as a rhetorical device by sociology students, because it seems that it has never been deliberated into the components that satisfy our sense of a scientific experiment. The front and back ends of the American Experiment tend to be ambiguous and the standards of reference for measuring anything are subjective and susceptible to biased influences. The American Experiment concerns the processing of abstract information (composition of legislation), which probably does not have a measurement standard; and the product, law, and law enforcement, have to be compared to the behavior of the society, which usually has an unpredictable delayed reaction, and the measurement standards thereof, seem to be unreliable due to partisan, racial, and commercial biases.
It is an, obviously, messy experiment system, but there is an actual experiment that was deployed that guides our reality, and it is relatively skewed of the altruistic ambitions that we trust it to be approaching. There is no guarantee that the American governing system is reliable for delivering what it promises to its citizenry - it is an experiment. In fact, there is considerable evidence that the government perpetually fails to deliver its promises, while at the same time the government insists that honest hard-working people pay to endure life in its success at delivering what would probably be described as, "tolerable social disorder." Eventually, that will become intolerable, and that will lead to a redesign of the government using the improved technology revealed since the deployment of the American Experiment.
The first generation of the American Experiment has probably expired its trial parameters, and the over-run is probably repeating and compounding errors in the processing of social issues. The imperfections of the government organization (experiment control system) probably become less tolerable relative to the evolution of society's sophistication.
If a perfect government is destined to guide its society toward its expectation, then what happens with a government that is not perfect?
Chances are the symptoms of social disorder that we are enduring are relative to the imperfections of the government design.
It is an, obviously, messy experiment system, but there is an actual experiment that was deployed that guides our reality, and it is relatively skewed of the altruistic ambitions that we trust it to be approaching. There is no guarantee that the American governing system is reliable for delivering what it promises to its citizenry - it is an experiment. In fact, there is considerable evidence that the government perpetually fails to deliver its promises, while at the same time the government insists that honest hard-working people pay to endure life in its success at delivering what would probably be described as, "tolerable social disorder." Eventually, that will become intolerable, and that will lead to a redesign of the government using the improved technology revealed since the deployment of the American Experiment.
The first generation of the American Experiment has probably expired its trial parameters, and the over-run is probably repeating and compounding errors in the processing of social issues. The imperfections of the government organization (experiment control system) probably become less tolerable relative to the evolution of society's sophistication.
If a perfect government is destined to guide its society toward its expectation, then what happens with a government that is not perfect?
Chances are the symptoms of social disorder that we are enduring are relative to the imperfections of the government design.