PoetPhilosopher
Veteran Member
The filibuster can be one's best friend or their worst enemy. Because whatever side can take full control, controls most things and can pass their agendas. A filibuster can be a stopgap from that.
A filibuster gets the two sides to work together. So even if it requires compromise, you end up with both Republican and Democrat ideas running the country.
Without a filibuster, in my eyes, you end up with things like 4-8 years of full Republican control, then 4-8 years of full Democrat control, or so on or so forth. With both sides spending that time undoing the good ideas and bad ideas both, of the other.
While I do think I may be painting with too broad a brush, I did have a larger point that in cases where the two sides don't work together, you end up with the country constantly thrust into extremes, the way the two-party system works.
To expand, I'm painting with a pretty broad brush, but I think things are partisan enough in the US right now, that I don't feel peace and sanity have yet been restored. And add to that a possible Trump run in 2024.
Though the whole "different parties fully running the country thing" will probably only be seen as a negative if people value consistency.