-Caveat Lector-

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"They that can give up essential liberty for a little safety deserve neither
liberty nor safety."

Ben Franklin




NEURONAUTIC INSTITUTE on-line: http://home.earthlink.net/~thew

------ Forwarded Message
> ''Condoleezza's nonsense about democracy''
> Printed on Monday, October 28, 2002 @ 00:07:00 EST   (  )
>
> By John Chuckman
> YellowTimes.org Columnist (Canada)
>
> (YellowTimes.org) ­ Condoleezza Rice wants to bring democracy to the Middle
> East. Ms. Rice, an expert on what is now an obsolete subject, the Soviet
> Union, believes this can be done the way the United States brought democracy
> to Chile or Iran or Afghanistan - that is, by violently overthrowing
> governments.
>
> Does democracy come from the full belly of a B-52 and the murderous aftermath
> of coups?
> Apparently not. Virtually none of the countries that America's freedom-loving
> army of enlightenment has bombed and shot-up over the last sixty years is
> today a democracy.
>
> One is reminded of the claims of Napoleonic France that it was spreading
> revolutionary principles by conquest. The conquest part was vigorously
> pursued, but the liberté, egalitié, et fraternité part left a little something
> to be desired.
>
> Ms. Rice displays little understanding of the history of democracy or of the
> circumstances which make it possible. She is not alone in this. Former
> Secretary of State Madeleine Albright's efforts on "democracy initiatives"
> displayed a similar lack of understanding, although it must be said in Ms.
> Albright's favor, she was less inclined than the ever-hysterical Ms. Rice to
> classify unprovoked attack by a great power as an initiative for democracy.
>
> Democracy is simply a natural development of a healthy, growing society. Over
> the long term, it requires no revolution, no coup, and no sacred writ. It
> grows and blooms as automatically as flower seeds tossed in a good patch of
> earth, although it is a plant whose maturity is measured in human lifetimes
> rather than seasons.
>
> The early United States after its revolution was no more a democracy than was
> the Mother Country. The growing authority of Parliaments had long limited the
> authority of Britain's monarchy. Even that mighty ruler, Elizabeth I, more
> than a century and a half before George III and the American Revolution, felt
> the limits of Parliament closing in on her.
>
> George III, despite later American myths, was very much a
> constitutionally-limited monarch. For some time, up to and during the
> Revolution, there were many prominent American colonists who felt that the
> machinations of the British Parliament were thwarting the intentions of the
> king and endangering the health of the empire. Even at that early time, people
> understood that elected government was just as capable of bad policy as a
> royal one or an aristocratic one. Indeed, the genius of the British
> (unwritten) constitution was seen by most thoughtful American colonists as
> being in the way it combined the three forms of government to offset each
> other, the direct origin of the American concept of "checks and balances" by
> branches of government.
>
> While the British franchise was then highly restricted, it was no less so in
> the early United States. It is estimated that maybe 1 percent of the
> population could vote in early Virginia with all the restrictions of age, sex,
> race, and ownership of property. That's actually roughly comparable to the
> percentage of people making decisions in contemporary Communist China where
> about 60 million party members hold sway over about 1.2 billion people.
>
> The American Revolution did not produce anything resembling a democracy, nor
> did the later Constitutional Convention. It took about two hundred years of
> growth and change in the United States for that to happen. The powerful
> Senate, able to block the elected President's appointments and treaties, only
> changed from being an appointed body to an elected one in 1913. The Senate to
> this day uses undemocratic operating rules and bizarre election patterns to
> shield it against public opinion.
>
> The popular vote for President did not matter originally. Apart from the fact
> that only a small number of males meeting property requirements could vote,
> the members of the Electoral College, drawn from political elites, were the
> ones whose votes actually counted. This absurdly out-of-date and
> anti-democratic institution still exists, and it can cause serious problems as
> we saw in the election of 2000.
>
> Women only got the vote in 1920. Blacks in the American South only received an
> effective franchise a few decades ago. In some places, like parts of Florida,
> recent elections suggest that methods may still operate to limit the franchise
> of black citizens.
>
> America has two parties sharing a quasi-monopoly on political power, and they
> produce much the same effects in the body politic that quasi-monopolies
> produce in the market place. The two quasi-monopoly parties are financed
> through a corrupt system of private donations. America herself still has a
> considerable way to go along the path to democracy.
>
> Yet Americans generally believe that their Revolution and Constitutional
> Convention created a full-blown democracy and near-perfect system of
> government right from the start. Perhaps this explains the blind faith of
> people like Ms. Rice in thinking that if you just have a big war or coup
> somewhere, you can create a democracy.
>
>
> Democracy comes gradually because it represents a massive social change that
> affects all relationships in society. The chief driving force towards
> democracy is the emergence of a strong middle class whose members have too
> much at stake to leave decisions to a king or group of aristocrats. The size
> of the middle class expands by steady economic growth. In the West, this
> process of change has proceeded steadily since the Renaissance and the rise of
> science and applied technology, with variations in the pattern of individual
> countries reflecting adjustments to peculiarities of local culture, invasions,
> civil wars, and varying rates of economic change.
>
> Many of the societies America looks askance at in the world today make no
> progress towards democracy because they make little progress of any kind,
> especially economic progress. Static societies with little or no economic
> growth are ones where ancient customs and social relationships do not change,
> where kings or warlords rule just as they did thousands of years ago in early
> societies.
>
> Economic growth is like a magical solvent that begins to erode old
> relationships. And given enough of it, over a considerable period of time, it
> erodes old ways of governing completely. This process is observable even
> within regions of a country. The American South was remarkably backward and
> static for a good part of the 20th century. But the shift of business and
> middle-class populations to the sunbelt during the middle of the century
> brought some rapid change - ergo, the phenomenon known as the New South.
>
> It has been said that if, in the wake of 9/11, the United States truly had
> wanted to battle for democracy and human rights, it would have dropped dollar
> bills rather than bombs on Afghanistan. That, of course, is an exaggeration,
> but it contains important truth.
>
> The United States could make a genuine contribution to the spread of democracy
> were it to focus attention on the economies of the world's more backward
> places. It might start with some generosity in foreign aid. The United States
> is the stingiest of all advanced countries in giving economic assistance to
> poor countries, giving at an annual rate of one-tenth of one percent of its
> GDP.
>
> Reducing or doing away with American agricultural subsidies that impoverish
> third-world farmers would also be a great help. So would the tariff and
> non-tariff barriers that the U.S. uses against many products from these
> struggling countries.
>
> Paying its dues to the United Nations and ending its childish carping about
> that important institution would help, since U.N. agencies perform many
> valuable services for the world's children, its refugees, and international
> cooperation and understanding.
>
> In general, concern for democracy calls for the U.S. to start behaving more
> like a responsible neighbor in the international community and rather less
> like an 18th century French aristocrat who barely notices as his carriage
> thumps over the body of whoever happened to be in its path.
>
> [John Chuckman is former chief economist for a large Canadian oil company. He
> has many interests and is a lifelong student of history. He writes with a
> passionate desire for honesty, the rule of reason, and concern for human
> decency. He is a member of no political party and takes exception to what has
> been called America's "culture of complaint" with its habit of reducing every
> important issue to an unproductive argument between two simplistically defined
> groups. John regards it as a badge of honor to have left the United States as
> a poor young man from the South Side of Chicago when the country embarked on
> the pointless murder of something like three million Vietnamese in their own
> land because they happened to embrace the wrong economic loyalties. He lives
> in Canada, which he is fond of calling "the peaceable kingdom."]
>
> John Chuckman encourages your comments: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>

------ End of Forwarded Message

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