TheCDs wrote:Mt. Epic wrote:But, have you noticed that the western world full of freedoms and independence from anything devotion of a certain lifestyle, despite having some financial problems right now, are the ones who prosperred to be world leaders, while the more totalitarian nations either all died off and turned democratic, or are barely thriving if at all thriving? Well, China is thriving, but it's still pretty bad over there.
I don't think that a strict, disciplinary regime with an endless list of rules and laws will succeed because people just won't go for it eventually, even if they never were able to comprehend an image of freedom, they will still despise their rulers anyway.
You could make the case that part of the reason for Western democracy's reign is because the US (and by extension our allies) have always been on a quest to rid the world of communism/socialism. Russia emerged from WWII as a world leader and superpower and ultimately failed. Part of that can be blamed on poor governing by the government but it was also heavily influenced by the US decision to oppose the USSR and communism.
And today's US political situation still carries the burden of this irrational fear of all things socialist - the throwing around of completely misappropriated -isms and evocations of Soviet society and other communist tropes. And somehow it is being wielded as a defence against "progress". Because apparently everything in America at the time of the constitution, was some Promised Land that has only been perverted by ideas such as abolishing slavery, and trying to put even basic regulation around ownership of firearms...
It's half the people looking forward, the other half looking back like Janus, and they're pulling in different directions, and so nothing goes anywhere. I'm a big proponent of change. Why not try something new? Ultimately, nobody really knows what's going to happen, rather there be some movement forward in pursuit of improvement, than shrinking back to minimise the risk of failure. And if it fails, you keep moving until you get it right.
I think this applies culturally as well. People always think of classical music, your Beethovens and your Mozarts, as being some immutable pure creation, so perfectly realised as to border on the divine. People always think of classical Greek and Roman architecture as being so much more real, more perfectly conceived. People think of the renaissance painters, and so on, as if they were magical perfect beings with a perfect insight into form, composition and expression. So people think of the Founding Fathers of the USA as being tasked by God directly, to create this perfect nation that was only perfect in its conception, and that ever since it has been poisoned and twisted and defiled. Given the number of amendments made, over half of them having been enacted by the 20th Century, it seems clear to any rational mind that improvements can be made, and in fact should be made, continuously, as an ongoing progressive process. Yet to hear the far right talk about it, the constitution and its second amendment may as well be the stone tablets Moses carried down the mountain.
And to hear them tell it, it might as well just say "No taxes. Keep your guns."
Edited by user 29 October 2010 02:00:28(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified