Every generation will have its sinful elite, not because the people failed to express the true ideals of liberalism or Marxism, but because we never escape our nature. — frank
Whoever is called a great minister,
when he finds that he cannot morally serve his prince, he resigns. — Confucius
"Unless," said I, "either philosophers become kings in the cities or those now called kings and rulers love wisdom seriously and adequately, and there is a conjunction of these two things, political power and philosophy, while the motley horde of the natures who at repesent pursue either apart from the other are excluded by force, there will be no end of evils, dear Glaucon, for the cities, nor, I think, for the human race either." — Plato. Republic,
The problem with animal farm, as with marxism, is that there simply aren't any of those safety valves that you have in a democracy and in a justice state. Especially when you start with a Dictatorship of the Proletariat, you simply will get a dictatorship. Has happened so every time. People not agreeing with you aren't people, they are the enemy.I wouldn't like to be in Animal Farm at all.
Where we actually are, I don't get a lot of choices of where in society I would rather be. — Vera Mont
There are some humans who will always look for and find the way to turn upheaval to their advantage, whether it's an invasion, a war, an economic disaster, or a revolution. When egalitarianism is a popular goal, these people will champion it, but they have no intention of being anywhere but at the top of the shuffled deck.
This is the main reason stratification has always followed the removal of a Czar, a French or English King, a Chinese emperor, and so forth. Every generation will have its sinful elite, not because the people failed to express the true ideals of liberalism or Marxism, but because we never escape our nature. — frank
You might argue that every society has it's pigs leading us, but that's not the case. — ssu
The pigs can act and behave quite differently. In a perfect society, we will feel that our pigs are incompetent in many things, but somewhat OK. Yet they aren't thieves and murderers. In a democracy, it doesn't get better than that. — ssu
Would it be easier if we accept our determinism and destiny? — javi2541997
Probably this is due to a failure to recognize the true extent of the proletariat and a wish to belong to the sphere of the elite — Pantagruel
And egalitarianism is the club we use to kill the elite so we can take their place. :up: — frank
Exactly. But they couldn't succeed if the population at large didn't want to be led, right? — frank
Unfortunately, if we do not at some point figure out how to manage an equitable redistribution of wealth and educate enough people to ensure it stays redistributed, hard economic realities dictate that there will be a vicious clash between "those who have literally nothing left to lose" and "those who stole the basic necessities of life from everyone else". — Pantagruel
Or if the elite weren't using the power of their resources to completely shred value of the information, to the point where most people are so obsessed with misinformation, and conspiracy theories about misinformation, that they simply have no idea what is going on, or what is actually in their own best interest. Per my post on the value and power of public information, which got zero comments. — Pantagruel
It's not that our wills are being thwarted by greedy evil doers, it's that we naturally gravitate toward hierarchy — frank
Well, I can think of Vietnam (earlier North Vietnam), which after Ho Chi Minh hasn't had a similar father figure, but something like 14 different presidents (or something in that number). Then there is Myanmar, which has been ruled by generals for quite a while, not by one superior individual general. Either country isn't a democracy. A third one doesn't come to mind now, hence it's usual that a political movement that drives for political change by using dictatorial powers usually will end up with one individual as a dictator.Show me three dictatorships without individual, identifiable dictators having hijacked a system that was originally intended for the common good. — Vera Mont
What I tried to say: in democracies people aren't always jubilantly happy about their elected leaders and there simply always is an opposition. That's why they change from time to time. And this is an inherent, structural issue in democracies: people have different ideas about what the best policies would be. Hence it's a fallacy that you could have an elected leadership that everybody, 100%, would approve.I don't understand. What perfect society? Which democracy makes it okay for leaders to be incompetent as long as they're not murderers? — Vera Mont
Many times people aren't asked who leads them and try to stay away from the dangerous mess that is politics. If your country is a failed state, the biggest problem for you isn't who claims to be the leader.Exactly. But they couldn't succeed if the population at large didn't want to be led, right? — frank
Lol, no. Neither do the Swedes.Do Finlanders go off into the tundra to avoid governmental interference? — frank
A third one doesn't come to mind now, hence it's usual that a political movement that drives for political change by using dictatorial powers usually will end up with one individual as a dictator. — ssu
in democracies people aren't always jubilantly happy about their elected leaders and there simply always is an opposition. — ssu
Populist no, definately. But notice that populism (not to be mixed with something being popular) is confrontational and adverserial: it's us, the ordinary people, against them. Be they the leaders, the elite, the rich or some ethnic minority that is seen to dominate.But democracy is not the usual outcome of a populist revolution. — Vera Mont
Or just like in Germany, Czechoslovakia (with then dissolved itself) and in the Baltic States, can come back if the state has been earlier in history a democracy. And that's one thing positive about democracies. Yes, you can get an autocrat elected, who does a self-coup and changes the democracy into being in name only, yet democracies can recover.Democracy is the usual outcome of a gradually dismantled monarchy. — Vera Mont
Few countries have been able to transform from a monarchy to a democracy (usually becoming constitutional monarchies) without any violence. Sweden comes to my mind. With the UK people usually forget that the country was a republic (if you can call the military dictatorship that) for a while.A long process of democratization, not a big clash of arms. — Vera Mont
But notice that populism (not to be mixed with something being popular) is confrontational and adverserial: it's us, the ordinary people, against them. Be they the leaders, the elite, the rich or some ethnic minority that is seen to dominate. — ssu
Few countries have been able to transform from a monarchy to a democracy (usually becoming constitutional monarchies) without any violence — ssu
In a selfish, individualistic and inherently distrusting society, egalitarianism gains potency. Such a state of affairs favours good will as it is unusual, and the general populous are ill equipped to deal with it. It easily overpowers as it has the advantage of being unfamiliar, understated and insidious/covert.
In an egalitarian, co-operative and trusting society, selfishness, manipulation and exploitation gains traction in much the same way.
Whatever is more difficult to detect and contend, becomes the more influential force.
At the end of the day, balance is always the go to.
Just as when everyone is Conservative, a Liberal ideal is new, fresh, appealing and a clear demonstration of potential for change, and when a society is overly Liberal, Conservative values become the hallmark of progress.
The majority is stagnancy, a stalemate, uninspiring, boring and unworkable. The minority is the forefront of innovation.
This pendulum has been swinging to and fro for millenia. — Benj96
In other words, good never ubiquitously prevails because there is bad in the world. Therefore, we should shun a striving for that which is good; instead favoring either the bad or a magical type of eternally unchanging, self-sustained, homeostasis between good and bad that never progresses in either direction. — javra
More like a choice between which kind of suffering one wants to experience - that which comes from pursuing good or that which comes from pursuing bad - — javra
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.