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| Philosophy of Politics Closely related to Ethics and Law, Politics is the study governments and nations. The philosophy of governing. Left or Right? What obligations are our political obligations? How did Politics come about? |
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| Re: Democracy
It's quite hard to generalize democracy; you should be more specific in your definition of democracy. Please narrow your idea, like "what does demoncracy mean in America today?" or "How has the fundamental idea of demoncracy evolved over time?"
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| Re: Democracy Quote:
No one has the right to take rights from another. No one has the right to surrender rights for his children that his children in another time might find useful. Only the most extreme of emergancies should substitute majority rule for government of consensus. It is consensus that make democracies. Everyone should get greased. Everyone should benefit from society if there is some benefit to be had. Everyone should have justice and political equality, with the expectation that economic equality should be sought. No one should inherit, to end the main reason for injustice and inequality. Each should be assured equality of opportunity and education from birth Simply put, democracy is a defensive form of social organization. No person can be trusted to defend rights for another. As the people require a common defense, so the people should know a common benefit. Each person should have the consent to give or hold on any affair touching on his welfare. Individual rights, and regional rights cannot be traded for political power. No majority can remove any minority from their rights. It is not the object of government to hide behind the rights of the people, but to defend those rights for all people. each mans legacy should be a state at peace and well able to defend itself. No one should need more than this to make his way. What ever a man may make in his life time can go back to the common wealth. Every person should be able to count on the common wealth for help, or start up capital, but again, to every community should their wealth be returned. Property should pay the cost of government to put pressure on it and to raise the price of labor. Three qualities only are necessary for democracy, and democracy is beyond reach to the extent that these qualities are missing. They are, Liberty, equality, and justice. These are the qualities of democracies from ancient times, and they are eternal. |
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| Re: Democracy
The function of rights with regards to individual liberty in democracy is a new one. I think, for our times, we have moved passed the age of enlightenment thinking - that democracy can be used to defend and promote liberty. Instead, it seems democracy has returned to it's original function, even in much of the rhetoric. Yes, democracy is still about public defense, but not defense of our rights. Instead, it is about economic defense. Admittedly or not, people are generally more concerned with their pocket book than their liberties. If they have money, they care little for freedom. Look at Russia. The Russian people have, at the ballot box, given up liberty within their democracy, most even embrace the growing authoritarian nature of their government. As the nature becomes wealthier, the people do not care. Shopping malls and new cars are wonderful distractions. |
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| Democracy - rule by the people
Democracy is rule by the people. That is the original (Greek) meaning of the word, and this definition cannot be tampered with. However, the concept of democracy has changed so much that we can now actually have a discussion about this. This change was brought about by the practical difficulties in implementing the rule by the people of ancient Greece (which, arguably, wasn't rule by the people, since women, slaves and poor people were excluded from the discussions). Today, democracy, I think, is rule by the majority - in whatever form that may take. However, democracy also inherently includes a respect for the minority. If the minority are ill-treated, it is not a democracy - in the meaning the concept carries today. Quote:
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| The following users say: THANK YOU - Leaf for the above post! | ||
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| Re: Democracy - rule by the people Quote:
Your example of Russia is an interesting tale without much application to our society. It is far easier to find a democracy among natural communities than to build one from scratch. Russia in particular has been a vast battle field forever. Our effect on that society was to fracture it further, and there was no chance for them, coming from the sixth most industrial country to the second in very short order against the impediment of tyranny and rule by terror. But we injected our theory of the individual, the glories and the glamours of Capitalism into their thoughts, and encouraged what might well be considered a natural criminality in that people. The only thing that will tie that people together is force or freedom. They are many different peoples still, even after breakup. Many of these peoples were forever enemies of the others, and these differences go back beyond the Mongols and the Russ. While democracy is natural to all people when equality was thought essential to survival; so soon as people can escape their social obligations and think only of themselves they do so. But these people do not choose between a strong society and a secure individual existence. When they choose an individual existence they lose the protection of a strong community and the community loses them, so each is weaker. Look at our society. Property excuses itself from its obligation to the commonwealth, but the people must still support the society. And the people cannot support the military and fight the war on what the wealthy leave them from what they produce. This weakens us all. Why should we defend the wealthy and their wealth if they will not support the country? We fight for them as much as for ourselves. They benefit while we do not, and it is their property which is defended, but their property, which was once our property will not support its own protection. So why do we support property? It is because their rights have firm legal support while ours do not. And we all think of ourselves as wealthy; only reduced to poverty by fate. Look at us in the age of science blaming our empoverishment on luck and fate. Luck and fate have nothing to do with it. It is what happened in Greece and Rome, where the rich had long since abandoned the sense of democracy in preference to their limited view of self service. |
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| Re: Democracy - rule by the people Quote:
Moving to a more practical discussion, I hate to distinguish between the rich and the poor because the distinction and definitions are so fluid. I don't believe that you can set it up as the rich vs. the poor today - perhaps in the Third World, but not in Western Europe anymore. I'm not saying that we are all economically equal because, thank God, we are not, but the distinctions between the upper, middle, and lower classes are not easily disintguished today. (And frankly I don't think there is anything wrong with economic inequality. I'm not rich - my father is disabled and not able to work, so I'm thankful to a society that provides us with a social safetynet and benefits - but I nevertheless believe that it's each man for himself. I do not believe in luck or fate as you say that we blame our empoverishment on - I believe in hard work and the free market, which has enabled all of us to make it for ourselves. I believe in the individual in a society - and I don't see how they can't function together.) Quote:
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| Re: Democracy - rule by the people Quote:
True democracy has only existed where social equality was enforced. We have a republic. We vote for representatives. We do not have one man one vote. But, because we have so few representatives we are easily divided, and even purposely divided through Gerrimandering, to deny people their voice. Since we do not actually have the right to vote on what our representative decides, we do not have a vote. Then, even while we have a vote on the representative, money also has a vote. We talk to our representatives, but money swears. And it is considered that wealth, and property have the right to influence the course of government. Where do they get the right to influence government if not at the expense of average joe human beings? They are getting what they ask for from government, and it is not what people want. So, how is our situation improved by money having access to our government? The more the minority controls government the smaller and richer that minority becomes. Quote:
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| The following users say: THANK YOU - Fido for the above post! | ||
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| Correction
Didymos Thomas, you posted the following: Re: Democracy it (democracy) is about economic defense. Admittedly or not, people are generally more concerned with their pocket book than their liberties. If they have money, they care little for freedom. Look at Russia. The Russian people have, at the ballot box, given up liberty within their democracy, most even embrace the growing authoritarian nature of their government. As the nature becomes wealthier, the people do not care. Shopping malls and new cars are wonderful distractions. 2 things. 1st, you're going against Bertrand Russell when you say that wealthy people tend to care less about their own freedoms. If you've heard of Maslov's hierarchy of needs, then you know that "freedom" is much "higher" and less urgent a concern than securing food. But putting aside the theories of old psychologists, don't you know any rich people? They are always the first to complain about the dangers of "mob rule" and "the taxman". They are very much concerned with their "right" to own property, which is one kind of freedom, albeit a kind that comes at the expense of others' claims on said property. There might be some truth to the idea that wealthy people are less concerned with, say, symbolic freedoms like the freedom to vote. Probably because as the value of freedoms go, the value of the right to vote is entirely symbolic for any one person. But wait... rich people tend to vote way more often than poor people. Thus even when it comes to meaningless gestures of concern toward freedoms, rich people make the gesture with higher frequency. Can you think of any freedoms denied to the rich that they are complacent about? Can you think of any freedom denied to a rich American which any other person on the PLANET is free to enjoy? I suppose rich Americans can't torture... . I suppose rich Americans can't commit genocide... . I suppose rich Americans can't fly . There are what, 6 billion people? Statistically one of them can probably fly, and statistically that one won't be a rich American . (Really they arn't supposed to be able to do alot of stuff, but if they really want to they can just book a spaceflight to some other country where its legal). If you have in mind something like the Patriot Act, I wouldn't regard that as a very good example. If you want to try to make a case for it, good luck, but keep in mind that the same law does not necessarily mean the same thing across wealth divides in the US legal system. I can imagine changing one word from your earlier post which would make it much more palatable. If you had said that rich people are more concerned with their OWN pocketbook than with OTHER peoples liberties, then i can see how that might be true. Regarding your comments on the Russian people, I very much doubt their elections were on the 'up and up'. I believe Putin assassinates journalists who offend his delicate sensibilities. I don't know to what extent the Russian people are willing to sacrifice freedom for bread, but I expect that those Russians who have plenty of bread and are on the outside of the politiburo are very much pissed about what's been going on. Kasparov is certainly a good example. I suppose I find the content of your post against both common sense and experience .
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| The following users say: THANK YOU - Michael Addison for the above post! | ||
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Love Russell, but I have no trouble disagreeing with him. Quote:
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But I could mention any other right and be correct. The US government can detain without charge any citizen for an indefinite amount of time and deny them the right to legal counsel in the process. Once again, you have no rights. Quote:
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Totally unnecessary, buddy. If you want to have a conversation, even a debate, I'm game, but this sort of conclusion is pointless. |
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