But just because the other side lies incessantly doesn’t mean “my side” is honest, honorable and sane. It doesn’t, alas, work that way.
In fact, my engrained understanding of the redistricting fight, though emotionally satisfying, might have been spinny bullshit. Argh.
So I had a talk with chatGPT...
The Dems insist that their redistricting moves in FL and VA were merely tit for tat after Republican redistricting schemes in TX a few months ago. Republicans are accusing Dems of leaving the voters out, but Dems say that’s exactly what the Republicans did in TX.
But I just saw a tweet saying “state legislature elections have different norms for citizen involvement”.
Can you flesh that out, and tell me if Democrats are making a false equivalence? I’m anti-MAGA, but also anti-bullshit.
Short answer: both sides are telling selectively true stories. The “different norms” point is real—but it explains the disagreement more than it resolves it.
There are three broad redistricting setups in the U.S.:
1. Legislature-controlled (e.g. Texas, Florida)So:
Maps are passed like ordinary laws. No required public vote.
👉 Mid-decade redraws without voters are procedurally normal here—even if aggressive.
2. Commission-based (e.g. California)
Independent/bipartisan bodies draw maps.
👉 Bypassing them violates the system’s intent.
3. Hybrid / voter-constrained (e.g. Virginia)
Legislatures operate under voter-approved rules, and structural changes can involve referenda.
👉 Voter involvement is part of the design.
* Texas: legislature redraws mid-decade → normal process, partisan outcome
* Virginia: voters approve a change enabling a redraw → more participatory process, same partisan aim
Different procedures, same underlying move. Are Democrats making a false equivalence? Not exactly—but it’s slippery.
They’re right that Republicans normalized mid-decade gerrymandering. But they stretch it by implying: “this is exactly the same thing.” It isn’t—procedurally. It is—strategically.
Republicans, meanwhile, complain about “cutting voters out” even where voters were explicitly involved, leaning instead on a broader fairness argument.
The cleanest read: same game, different rulebooks, identical incentives.
I’m exhausted by all sides spraying untruths 24/7. “Everyone is lying to me incessantly” leads to Soviet-style cynicism—i.e. there is no truth. It’s a big reason I moved to Portugal.
That slide is real—but it’s also a trap.
There’s a difference between “everyone is lying” and “everyone is spinning from a position of interest.” The redistricting fight is closer to the second. It feels like the first because both sides are telling true things that are strategically incomplete. A few things remain solid:
• Mid-decade redistricting is now normalizedThe confusion comes from collapsing two axes into one:
• Both parties use it for advantage
• States operate under genuinely different rules
* outcome (“it’s the same”)Both are true. Neither is sufficient alone.
* process (“it’s different”)
Hey, one does what one can. But my unfamiliarity with Portugal keeps me planted in the immediate and not drifting out into the fluffy storyline strata of it all. Unfamiliarity plants you in the here-and-now.
That’s a useful constraint.
Operating in a second language narrows interpretation. You track what’s actually said, not the expanding cloud of implication.
Portuguese culture generally parses as adorable, largely because it’s unfamiliar.
What reads as “bullshit” at home lands more like “local shimmy” abroad—not because it’s purer, but because it hasn’t yet collapsed into a familiar pattern.
The downside: drift, missed expectations, the 11:00 that becomes 11:40.
The upside: less narrative inflation.
It occurs to me that I might have missed a critical axis in this equation: tedium.
Maybe I’m not sick of being lied to incessantly, but am mostly tired of being lied to in the same irritating way.
That tracks with cynical Russians I’ve met. They’re more bored than angry. I used to figure they were numb from long suffering. But perhaps it’s more about length and less about suffering. They’re fed up with the form more than the content.
That’s the sharper cut.
After repetition, the brain compresses: “I’ve seen this move.” Novelty disappears. Attention withdraws. What remains isn’t outrage—it’s boredom. Not “This is intolerable” but “This again.”
If tedium is the driver, then the opposite of cynicism isn’t truth—it’s novelty: encountering something that doesn’t instantly collapse into a known pattern.
So instead of: “Everyone is lying so there is no truth,” you get: “Everyone is running the same scripts so I’m exhausted by the repetition.” Less existential. More like creative bankruptcy.
Yeah. Nice aikido flip. And I think it’s apt, and not mere “copium” (i.e. just “a nice way to think of it”).
It helps—but it doesn’t absolve anything. A stale lie is still a lie.
What changes is the affect. Outrage energizes, while boredom anesthetizes
Systems don’t need to persuade you. They just need to out-repeat your capacity to care.
I guess it boils down to “Lie differently, please!” It’s an awfully odd stataement, but it wouldn’t provoke a knowing chuckle if there weren’t something to it.
Exactly. It’s not about truth—it’s about repetition.
“I know you won’t stop—just don’t run the same script.”
That’s acknowledged artifice. The joke lands because the pattern is seen.
There’s a catch: better lies can re-engage you without improving anything. You’re asking for better performance, not better truth.
It’s a huge shift to pin the problem on aesthetic considerations. Tonal considerations. Dramaturgic considerations!
Yes—that’s the turn. You stop asking only “Is this true?” and start asking “How is this being performed?”
Now you have three axes:
• TruthTedium is what aesthetic failure feels like from the inside.
• Power/Intent
• Aesthetic (alive vs dead performance)
Cynicism could be parsed as interest shifting away from some strata due, largely, to tedium. Even though it’s always attributed as a rejection of substance (“those bastards!”), due to projection. I.e. “The preoccupation that previously drew my passion has failed to hold my enthusiastic attention. My fallen interest must be their fault.”
That tracks. Cynicism often isn’t heightened clarity—it’s attentional withdrawal. “I’ve seen this scene too many times.”
That withdrawal gets recast as moral judgment, ala “they’re contemptible,” which preserves a sense of certainty. But the underlying shift is simpler:
curiosity → recognition → saturation → disengagementSeeing that distinction prevents the jump to: “there is no truth”
If you have no fresh new stratum to shift to and absorb in to replace the one that dried up for you, you’ll wind up listless and defeated. But that’s not the inevitable outcome of cynicism, even though that’s how we imagine cynics. You can always reframe into some new enthusiasm or perspective or movement or general area of concern.
Right. Cynicism isn’t terminal. It’s local exhaustion. If you can shift frames, you don’t get stuck there.
Well, we’ve at least squeezed some epistemological takeaway from the current redistricting furor!
Not a bad yield. A messy political spat becomes a usable lens.