The essential question here is how far are you willing to go to ensure the survival of democracy, either in one country, or globally? — Pneumenon
I'm not willing to do anything to ensure the survival of democracy. Being tied to one particular political system is a problem, not a solution.The essential question here is how far are you willing to go to ensure the survival of democracy, either in one country, or globally? — Pneumenon
Okay, cool! So how does it work out using your hierarchy of values? — Pneumenon
In my hierarchy, democracy is not a good, and therefore the question becomes unanswerable. I don't think it is even a necessary evil -- in my appraisal it is a quite unnecessary evil. — Mariner
Assumption: democracy is inherently good, not just a decision-making procedure. — Pneumenon
Gotcha. So if the population of a country decides that they want to vote out democracy, there is no democratic way to constrain them?
Assumption: democracy is inherently good, not just a decision-making procedure. — Pneumenon
Why exactly would a population of people vote away their power? — yatagarasu
...what measures are permissible to protect democracy? Is it ethical to spread democracy, rather than just protecting it? And what means would be too terrible to use, even to defend democracy?
For example, assume that the only way to protect democracy is to prevent a totalitarian politician from being elected, and in order to do so, you must either assassinate that politician, or postpone the election, allowing some time for the revolutionary fervor of that politician's supporters to die down. It may seem obvious to you that doing one of those is (or is not) a good idea. But why is it so obvious?
Democracy's weakness and strength is the stability it gives. With totalitarianism you can actually have really good times if your leader is benevolent and knows what he is doing. (Example: See Singapore/Lee Kuan Yew, or Korea/Sejong the Great). But unfortunately most of history has been the exact opposite. Democracy avoids this but makes actually fixing issues a slow and sometimes impossible task. — yatagarasu
It can rule out the abolishment of the democratic system through its constitution. So, an undemocratic agenda is ipso facto unconstitutional and can be dealt with by the law. — Πετροκότσυφας
And the Constitution cannot be amended? :-!It can rule out the abolishment of the democratic system through its constitution. So, an undemocratic agenda is ipso facto unconstitutional and can be dealt with by the law. — Πετροκότσυφας
Good, then we first amend the article that says those articles are not amendable, then we proceed to amend the unamendable articles. Deal? X-)If the constitution says that some of its articles are not amendable, then these articles are not amendable. — Πετροκότσυφας
"the will of the people" is a myth ultimately. "The people" don't have a will. Only individuals do. The myth of the "will of the people" is the most effective tool for control in a democracy. Maybe we can talk about "the will of the people" in a small group - say 50 people - but for millions, there is no common will. Choosing between black and white - that's not the will of the people, they're simply not given other choices.More importantly, though... If the constitution cannot be amended by the will of the people, then it ain't democratic. — Pneumenon
Yes, for sure. All political regimes are myths - the world moves through political regimes cyclically. In today's world we have returned to the democracy of the Greeks - the same democracy that killed Socrates. But it is a transformed democracy, it is a democracy of this age. But that is no problem. Soon the other regimes will be coming back as well. Monarchies and all the rest. They will not be like monarchies of 300 years ago. They will be monarchies of this age.So democracy, too, is a myth. — Pneumenon
f your definition of "democratic" implies that defense of democracy is undemocratic, then sure, it is. — Πετροκότσυφας
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