Virtual ghost
Complex paradigm
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2008
- Messages
- 22,168
That's a rosy colored view of democracy with a state. Colin Powell emerged on the scene as an honorable, upright, stand-up guy. Politics turned him into a scavenging bureaucratic weasel who lied, lied, lied to manufacture support from the public for an invasion into Iraq...which Cheney's company Halliburton grabbed all the big oil contracts for. The lesson is if representative democracy can corrupt colin powell, it corrupts any run of the mill politician. That's just the nature of the system.
Democracy with a state is the best system anyone has come up with in terms of being able to have a populace running inside a hamster wheel without having to put a gun to their head...you seriously cannot tell me that the population in a democracy has any more external freedom than a dictatorship when it is a demonstrable fact so many citizens marched off to their own deaths in a pointless war called Vietnam. Muhammad Ali didn't go because he understood the war made no sense, and he got thrown into jail. You're talking differences on paper, but in reality, there's no real practical difference.
Those low corruption indexes are garbage, people don't engage in the sophisticated analysis required to sniff out the corruption in G7 countries. Keep in mind that the opiates of the masses includes more than just religion....it also includes keeping people numbed out through hedonistic comforts. So just because your standard of living may be higher doesn't mean that your external freedoms or quality of life are any higher or that you've attained any type of truer happiness. It just means that more people in your country have been programmed to associate quality of life with the attainment of status and other false needs -- working hard in order to consume, consume, consume, so they keep that hamster wheel spinning.
I will also take a shot at all of this.
The key to everything what you are saying is the old saying "USA is not a democracy, but a constitutional republic". I am pretty sure you heard something like this over your life. However that claim is the key, since this means that there are topics that people living in the US shouldn't open or question (at least not much). What in the end led to many problems which eventually resulted with current situation. However the bottom line is exactly in the fact that the democracy was never fully expanded (as in other fully developed nations). If you think that your elections with just 2 parties playing games over the electoral college are genuine representative democracy .... I have some bad news for you. In other words this is the most basic democracy you can get, which in a sense no longer fits the time in which we are living. Back in a day all of this was pretty revolutionary and visionary, however better systems have been invented since centuries have passed. Which is exactly why there is a problem with the "constitutional republic". Since that set of rules doesn't allow too much of a change, however without change the odds are that you will not be able to keep up with the world. Structure of the government is basically like a operating system, so if you don't upgrade that from time to time you will start to fall behind in economy, development, quality of life .... and the problems will only snowball as the time goes by. Therefore the problem isn't in representative democracy but in the fact that there is deficit of it in the system. Plus the fact that good chunk of people doesn't even bother to vote only makes things worse.
Therefore since the odds are that you will not be able to change the system in the near future you can at least increase the number of people that votes. Since that offers at least some protection from the worst forms of radicalism and exploitation. Larger turnout almost never favors radicals and people with "fairly flexible morals". Even if most of none voters would actually join the Republican party they could totally overwhelm in numbers the crazy stuff that are going over there. Therefore if you can't change the system at this point you can at least try to change the parties. Which one you choose doesn't really matter all that much as long as you stand for the basic morals and commons sense. What matters since both parties seem to be short in those departments. However if you would have more of that you would have something that looks like something that can be called representative democracy. The whole problem is that you don't have enough of that out in the field, not that it can't work.