Li is a clown.  Somebody put a pie in his face.

Come on, nettimers.  As they say, Democracy is the worst system, except for all 
the others.

Whenever I hear someone argue against free speech - someone else's free speech, 
of course -  I wonder how they would feel if I tell them to shut up or else I 
will kill them, torture their family etc?

'A responsible person, one would think, would consider the consequences of 
advocating everyone being free to say whatever he wants. An intelligent 
observer of human society and student of history ought to be more thoughtful 
than simply asking, "why is that a problem?"'
 
If he's in favour of limiting speech, why is he allowed to speak freely?  
Because he's intelligent, responsible, thoughtful.  A student of history.  
Those well-intentioned protestors under the tank treads of Tiananmen, however, 
were simply whistling their way towards social catastrophe.  Off with their 
heads.  Well, not so much off, as SQUISH their heads.

You, for instance, reading this. You aren't allowed to respond, or we'll come 
to your house and cut your balls off.

Mr Li, shut your yap.  Quit rationalizing your own privilege. For instance, 
talking about Japan, Taiwan, etc, he says:

"True, some of them have implemented electoral democracies after they became 
wealthy. But barely a generation has passed since they did so - is it not much 
too soon for any serious student of history and politics to render judgment on 
their outcomes?"

"Barely a generation" since Japan and Taiwan became democracies?  They got 
universal suffrage in 1945 and 1947 - almost 70 years ago, maybe three 
generations.  How can he say it's "much too soon" to analyze their successes 
and failures but he's fine judging the historical shift from Marxist-Leninism 
to (so-called) Confucianism in 1979?  Or maybe he's fine wrapping up his 
analysis of Communist China starting in 1949?  Or if he's going to start with 
the founding of the CPC in 1921, then it's only fair to start with Japan's 
first election in 1890.  Over that period, has more democracy or more 
authoritarianism been the most beneficial to Japan and its neighbours?  Discuss.

Mr Li, how can corruption be controlled without free speech?  Oh yes, by magic:

"For example, in Confucian values, power is checked by the inherent moral order 
of society not by legal means relied upon by the Western tradition."

Is such obvious nonsense really worth rebutting with more than an "OMG WTF 
ETC"?  

*Sigh*  Ok, then.

Li claims that the CPC keeps its finger on the pulse of society, without the 
need for free speech and democracy.  We should take the Party at their word 
that they are doing this, because their system demonstrably plucks the best and 
brightest from all corners of society, and what else could the best and 
brightest of any society do but make the world better?  There's no need for 
civil-society oversight, and in any case civil society's oversight is what 
allows the CPC to oversee themselves.

Seriously, his argument wouldn't be out of place in ancient Sparta.

It's gobbledygook.  Moreover, the most obvious cases of corruption that the CPC 
deal with forcefully are the ones that get broadcast illegally on Weibo, like 
the Li Gang incident.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Li_Gang_incident

So then Li tries to rebut an ancient chinese proverb, about how ships of state 
can, and should, be occasionally overturned by the people:

"The ship, however, is no longer just an emperor and his dynasty but the larger 
and far more sophisticated political system that constitutes the modern 
nation-state."

He's basically arguing that it would be harder to overturn the CPC than an 
emperor.  It's unclear how this relates to the question of whether it should be 
overthrown at all, but it's also bollocks because the Emperor wasn't just 
standing alone on top of a throne in the wilderness.  I mean, for pete's sakes, 
check out the palace:

http://www.chinahighlights.com/beijing/map/forbidden-city-map.htm

"The idea of consent is hyped. The political ideology of the modern West 
equates the so-called consent of the governed to legitimacy. This is form over 
substance and procedure over essence."

Can a man who claims to be expressing unpolluted Chinese thought sound any more 
like Ghaddafy? 

But whatever huge flaws democracies have - the power of money, the structural 
biases in favour of incumbents, the sound-bite culture and the game-theory 
strategizing - I believe the channeling of conflicts into elections is probably 
their most beneficial aspect.  Procedure is the very substance of Democracy, 
not some sideshow.  I think even the placebo effect of elections - elections 
where real change is possible, even if it never works out that way - is good 
for us.  We argue, we get together with like-minded neighbours, what would the 
gun-bearing Tea Party nut bars be doing for the last few years if they didn't 
have rallies to go to?!

Those of you who think we should be at the barricades instead of the ballot 
box, who do you think will be meeting you halfway over the top, coming the 
other way?  Who do you think will be better armed and trained?

Anyway, the problem in our democracies is not too much democracy, but too 
little.  The parliamentary first-past-the-post systems in Canada, for instance, 
are deeply flawed, and this is because they are simply the best model we've 
been able to claw out by strikes, rebellions, deep organization, occasional 
armed resistance, and shameless horse-trading against the fascist patriarchy we 
inherited from the dark mist of history.  Good god, there's a monarch on our 
coin, how much farther uphill is the struggle for true democracy?

We certainly have a lot to learn from China, about philosophy, food, medicine, 
culture, planning, science and internet socializing.  But we have nothing to 
learn from the CPC about good government.  Stability, as defined in US State 
Department jargon, is nothing to emulate.

-Flick Harrison



--
* WHERE'S MY ARTICLE, WORLD?
http://wikipedia.org/wiki/Flick_Harrison

* FLICK's WEBSITE & BLOG: http://www.flickharrison.com 


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