This website looks at great issues through the lens of crunchiness: is what is happening, or being proposed, crunchy?
It is entirely focused on policies and actions to address the great issues that confront the US and our people: this, after all, is why we have a government and a body politic.
It is easy to forget this:
Meanwhile the country’s business is not being done, the people’s interest are ignored.
Crunchicrant is laser focused on a few key issues that will really impact our lives and the success of the country: and it will be relentless in covering those issues, all aspects of them and nothing swept under the carpet, solutions and the trade-offs that any solution will contain, policy of government and any rational and credible opposition to government, and actual progress towards addressing those key issues.
Crunchiness as understood in this website was conceived by journalist Nico Colchester, in a fine piece of journalism.
Things are crunchy when events and their impact on individuals are closely and directly connected:
Crunchiness can be cruel – for example, ill health and bad luck could (perhaps unfairly) adversely impact an individual in a crunchy system, whereas in a soggy system that bad stuff may be spread around among the community.
As Colchester points out sogginess is in demand everywhere (and is not the preserve of one or other political party): civilization itself is an exercise in creating safety nets – so in sogginess: but therein has lain the destruction of every civilization til now – how long can western civilization (and the US is the leader of that civilization) last?
Because crunchiness can be harsh, people have and may in the future want to build social constructs that provide a more equable society and to shelter people from the impacts of misfortune.
That is rational, desirable – but it is also dangerous: Crunchicrant looks for the narrow path towards progress that avoids the moral hazard of sogginess and, ultimately, of destruction.