by Pops » Wed 24 Jul 2013, 10:37:16
I think today there are more democracies than not, but it's certainly messy after eons of rule by the rich and powerful. We in the US are pretty dysfunctional right now but I don't think we're circling the drain, I'm probably too optimistic tho, I bought a lotto ticket yesterday, LOL.
Any organization is going to drift toward oligarchy, that's the rule. The aim of a democracy is to be able to throw the oligarchs out without burning down city hall. But the point of representative government is to elect representatives to do what the individual can't or won't for the "Greater Good". Otherwise why have a government at all? To protect the turf of the local Plutocrat? Our big problem is probably also the oldest; everyone wants something and nobody wants to pay.
But generally my personal feeling is the duty of citizens is to guard against oligarchy but the duty of government is to protect the citizen from whoever would seize power, whether that's a foreign power or an internal power. The most obvious internal powers of course are the mentioned special interests, plutocrats and especially the non-human personage of corporations.
Dow, RJ Reynolds, GM, "investment" bankers - and carbon producers. Go down a list and it is clear that corporations will not do the right thing unless forced and will whine and cry and lie every step of the way if it affect the bottom line. So laws or fines or both are required to be enacted by the representatives.
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I don't believe we're circling the drain though, more likely just continuing a cycle. Young people are idealistic and old people are afraid and it's always been that way so it should be no surprise that with a lot of old people they are being more successful hanging on to their gains. For 50 years the owners have been ascendant and the worker in a rut, 50-100 years ago it was the reverse - we were younger then and more idealistic.
I heard on NPR yesterday that some TEAs and Dems are getting together to oppose portions of the military appropriations bill regarding civil rights, domestic spying etc., I believe I pre-visioned that... (No Country For Old Men allusion there in case you missed it lol) Maybe with the Boomers Bubble passing like a too-big-serving of cabbage, young people can assert their idealism again.
That's enough of that lol
/off_topic_rant
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)