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John Newsom's avatar

Thank you for this. It points out the weaknesses of regime change so clearly, and, although daunting, describes the work that needs to be done. I admit, it feels overwhelming, but it is gratifying to see the outlines of a "Project 2025" for democracy.

Jason Edwards's avatar

This is the clearest map of the democratic inversion I've encountered. The three-phase structure does for the resistance side what Levitsky did for authoritarian consolidation — it makes the path visible.

One place I'd push: the consolidation principles you identify are correct, but the enforcement mechanism is still principled commitment. "Made in writing, in advance" is better than nothing. But you name the problem yourself — these commitments are easiest to make when the temptation is abstract. Momentum, legitimacy, urgency, and available authoritarian tools are exactly the conditions under which written commitments have historically collapsed. The failure modes you describe aren't failures of vision. They're failures of structure.

The structural question the framework doesn't quite close: who enforces it, and through what mechanism?

The answer I keep coming back to: the constraint has to be encoded before the breakthrough, not just committed to. Norms are load-bearing until the conditions that supported them change — then they're painted lines. The 22nd Amendment is the canonical example. Congress didn't recommit to the two-term norm after FDR. They poured concrete. The amendment exists because everyone understood that the norm had proven insufficient under pressure.

The preparation phase you describe isn't just about building coordination infrastructure. It's the window for pouring concrete — designing the structural constraints that will hold during consolidation precisely because they don't depend on anyone's good intentions in the moment.

What would that look like in your framework?

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