No. I'm saying that institutional failure should be addressed/solved "in place", rather than blindly hoping that disbanding said institution would solve anything.
- There's a high likelihood that the institution was created because it's useful. Before arguing for its complete removal, the onus is on you to prove that you understand why it was originally needed, and why/how the circumstances changed in a way that makes it non-useful/not needed anymore.
- There's a high likelihood that if it's needed, just disbanding it and creating a new one will not solve stuff in the long run. Before replacing the institution one needs to show that they understand what are the challenges of reforming it (why reforming will be impossible/more difficult than recreation; and why the new institution will avoid having the same fate).
It's in a way similar to software: many engineers will jump at the opportunity to declare that "old code is garbage and should be rewritten from scratch"; but that is seldom a good choice, and once you start on that path, if you're simply trying to replicate the same functionality you are more likely than not to end up with new code that is still garbage.
- There's a high likelihood that the institution was created because it's useful. Before arguing for its complete removal, the onus is on you to prove that you understand why it was originally needed, and why/how the circumstances changed in a way that makes it non-useful/not needed anymore.
- There's a high likelihood that if it's needed, just disbanding it and creating a new one will not solve stuff in the long run. Before replacing the institution one needs to show that they understand what are the challenges of reforming it (why reforming will be impossible/more difficult than recreation; and why the new institution will avoid having the same fate).
It's in a way similar to software: many engineers will jump at the opportunity to declare that "old code is garbage and should be rewritten from scratch"; but that is seldom a good choice, and once you start on that path, if you're simply trying to replicate the same functionality you are more likely than not to end up with new code that is still garbage.