No one stating that "Donald Trump is threatening Democracy" is equating American Democracy with the Democracy of Ancient Greece.
Why would anyone want a system in which every cook can govern? Why would anyone want a random selection?
I can't believe that someone can say that governance does not require expertise. We don't choose our surgeons randomly. We choose our surgeons intelligently. We want the best possible surgeon.
The reasons that women and minorities are not surgeons is the same reason women and minorities are not in positions of governance. What we are calling "expertise" is the alibi of oppressors. It is easier for us to believe that white men are "experts" than women and minorities. So we need to completely detox our minds of this aristocratic/meritocratic/capitalistic way of thinking and organizing society. — Zoneofnonbeing
I'm sorry, but this is silly. No one stating that "Donald Trump is threatening Democracy" is equating American Democracy with the Democracy of Ancient Greece. It is simply a shorthand way of stating that Donald Trump's presidency is tarnishing political institutions, and other institutions that are important within modern day democracies, e.g. media, which is true. It does not inherently imply that America is a literal Democracy any more than saying it is sunrise implies that the sun is literally rising and circling the Earth. — Maw
The point is that people are unequal. Some people are better at certain things than others. This applies to legislature too.
Some people have a better sense of what is good and what is bad than others
Yes, and that is part of the problem. If people actually read about and understood the democracy of Ancient Greece, they would not be claiming that America was a democracy at all. — Zoneofnonbeing
The point is that people are unequal. Some people are better at certain things than others. This applies to legislature too. Some people have a better sense of what is good and what is bad than others. — Magnus Anderson
There are three white men who possess more wealth than the bottom 50% of the population — Zoneofnonbeing
There are three white men who possess more wealth than the bottom 50% of the population - but America is not an oligarchy, right? — Zoneofnonbeing
Only 5-6 corporations control 90% of the information we get to hear - but America is not an oligarchy, right?
When we look at the last 50 years in American politics, the most powerful offices in the land (president, vice president, attorney general, governor, senator, secretary of state) have been disproportionately held by members of just three families: Kennedy, Bush, and Clinton - but America is not aristocratic and oligarchic, right?
Reminder: the definition of oligarchy is a system whereby a few people are in power. Claiming that America is not an oligarchy is a demonstration of willful ignorance. American democracy is not "precarious" - its non-existent.
it isn't "expertise" so much as intelligence, thoughtfulness, insight, and interest. — Bitter Crank
People are unequal, no doubt about that: pick a trait, any trait, and you will find that it is dispersed across a mostly normal distribution, with most people in the middle, smaller numbers above average, and smaller numbers below average. — Bitter Crank
The reason for randomly selecting people to serve is to eliminate the "preselection" by the political system, which is pretty good at selecting people who are quite devoted to the interests of the ruling class. (This isn't peculiar to either parties -- its endemic to both of them.) — Bitter Crank
I reject the Hobbesian view of human nature here - one that dovetails with Darwin's "survival of the fittest" logic that drives capitalism. To a degree, yes, people are unequal. But the more important point is: people are treated unequally. The idea that our society should be based on nature is an aristocracy: a totalitarian regime. — Zoneofnonbeing
White men are in positions of power, and have been for hundreds of years. Following your logic, you are saying that white men have a "better sense of what is good and what is bad" than women and minorities. Two cheers for racism and sexism! — Zoneofnonbeing
This type of inequality is certainly deleterious to democracy, but that by itself does not transform America into an oligarchic state
So? Most of those individuals were qualified to run and hold elected positions, and to my point, some of them were elected, and some were not. How is that oligarchic?
You must provide other examples of oligarchic countries with which we can compare the USA and see where, if any, parallels exist.
-@Magnus AndersonWhite men do appear to have better judgment than women and other races. That's reality. You can shame it all you want but it won't change the fact that it is reality.
Democracy is a system where the people are in power. — Zoneofnonbeing
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