Lonewulf
Humanistic Cyborg
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2005
- Messages
- 10,375
Maybe rich in ideas or in thoughts.
Without relevant technology or science, ideas and thoughts are useless.
Going into the backwoods is just that; a regression, a back-step.
Maybe rich in ideas or in thoughts.
Without ideas and thoughts, technology and science makes more sins than benefits.Without relevant technology or science, ideas and thoughts are useless.
Going into the backwoods is just that; a regression, a back-step.
Without ideas and thoughts, technology and science makes more sins than benefits.
It never was. It's hopelessly pie-in-the-sky unrealistic to implement. But like most things, human beings had to find out the hard way...See several hundred involuntary economic experiments from last century. It's no longer a viable theory.
Without any ideas or thoughts, technology and science don't exist.
You can't do math if you don't think at all.
It's actually "ideas and thoughts", ideologies in particular, that have done the most damage.
Without democracy ideology, the world could be much darker.
What kind of better world do you imagine without democracy?And with a democracy ideology, the world could be much darker too.
The present situation is far from perfect, but if you can't get along with it, you definitely have other options like China, Cuba, Iran or North Korea maybe your best choice. If you live in democratic country and decry, you are nothing, not even a hypo, just plain liar.If democracy was blindly followed as an ideology, much harm to the minority from the majority would result. It would be two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for dinner. It would be a vast majority of racists voting on what to do about the blacks. It would be... well, you get the point.
America is not a pure democracy. It is a Democratic Republic, a mixture of checks and balances between a single leader (executive), the courts (judicial), and the people's choices (legislative).
What kind of better world do you imagine without democracy?
The present situation is far from perfect, but if you can't get along with it, you definitely have other options like China, Cuba, Iran or North Korea maybe your best choice.
If you live in democratic country and decry, you are nothing, not even a hypo, just plain liar.
Why would I take America as Athenian copy?Wow, you really misunderstood my post.
If you think that America has an Athenian Democratic System, you are completely and entirely wrong.
Why are you so obsessed with "pure" democracy? Would you stop breathing if there is no pure air?That was not what I said. Blind faith in an ideology is much worse than an ideal that also takes into account human behavior and social necessities. A democratic republic is not a pure democracy. If you think it is, then please, go educate yourself.
You think it is not pure, don't you? If not being pure is not anything wrong, why do you wast time mentioning it?I actually have my own ideals as far as government goes, but that's neither here nor there. I never stated that there was anything wrong with the American system, or most democratic republics.
So what? Do you mean that since we can not get 100% pure water, we should stop drinking water at all?Athenian Democracy (rule of majority) != Democratic Republic (Checks and balances of power between alternate groups).
Just in case you misread that, "!=" means "Does Not Equal" in C++ language.
By that we call the thing from a tap water is also "misnomer", because it is not pure anything.America relies on a liberal democracy that has a constitution and other "rules of law" that provides it's citizens with inalienable rights under the philosophical idea of Natural Law. With guaranteed liberals and due process, added to checks and balances between different political and interest groups, you have a system that actually is capable of stability for long stretches of time (but not infinitely, naturally).
The United States has a constitution that cannot be removed even by the majority. This breaks a pure Democratic Ideology, if by "democratic" you mean "rule of the majority". The ideal wasn't to have the majority rule anything, but instead to have checks and balances between differing powers, each of which could influence one another, but were diversified. The will of the majority is not the only ideal in a Democratic Republic, making the "Democracy" title somewhat of a misnomer.
This is pure trash I always ignore.That's cool.
And you obviously have no reading comprehension, so I guess we'd both have our faults, then.
Also, seriously? If you want to be taken seriously on the interweb, learn some grammar and spelling skills plz.
First of all, I'll assume that "hypo" means "hypocrite", and not "hypodermic needle" as I'm used to seeing it be used. Also, you forgot to insert an "a" between "just" and "plain". Just some advice.
Also, I'll have to assume that when you say "and decry", you mean, "And decry it", or "and decry [a democratic country]". You also forgot to put "a" between "in" and "democratic".
Though, considering these grammar errors, I suppose it's safe to assume that English is not your first language; which is cool, and in which case, just take it as some lingual advice.
yinyinyang said:Why would I take America as Athenian copy?
Can you find anything in what I said that has any hint that I assume that?
yinyinyang said:Why are you so obsessed with "pure" democracy? Would you stop breathing if there is no pure air?
10% democracy is better than nothing.
yinyinyang said:So what? Do you mean that since we can not get 100% pure water, we should stop drinking water at all?
yinyinyang said:By that we call the thing from a tap water is also "misnomer", because it is not pure anything.
yinyinyang said:This is pure trash I always ignore.
"England" is not a democratic republic, and neither are Great Britain or the United Kingdom. Those are all democratic monarchies, just like a lot of other countries.... in America, Canada, England, etc. They are not democracies, they are a democratic republic.
"England" is not a democratic republic, and neither are Great Britain or the United Kingdom. Those are all democratic monarchies, just like a lot of other countries.
"England" is not a democratic republic, and neither are Great Britain or the United Kingdom. Those are all democratic monarchies, just like a lot of other countries.
But the Monarchy has no real power to speak of, do they? I was under the impression that the UK was far more a republic than it was a monarchy.
If by "ideal" democracy you mean involving every one in every decision making concerning public affairs, that is not technically possible. No one would be that insane to pursuit it or even think about it.Athenian democracy is the closest thing to the ideal of democracy, I.E., rule of the majority. I personally do not consider rule of the majority to be "ideal". If you do, that is nice, but personally I prefer the democratic republic.
If you are obsessed with pure grammar, how about doing some homework on this very piece above.What, grammar corrections are pure trash? I shall not endeavor to try to correct you again, then.
I'm beginning to think that you I should ignore, too. Until you actually try to read and comprehend what I'm saying, this conversation will go nowhere. You do not understand the first thing about what I am saying. You are drawing conclusions that do not exist. You are constructing strawmen and misconstruing every single sentence.
Until you even try, this is going nowhere.
Good day.
E
If by "ideal" democracy you mean involving every one in every decision making concerning public affairs, that is not technically possible. No one would be that insane to pursuit it or even think about it.
Having said above, you still have not given a single reason for what could go wrong with "ideal democracy" except for operational difficulties mentioned by me above.
I am trying hard to find out why the world could be darker with democracy ideal, a claim you made before.
If you only give results with no reasoning in between, you can't blame others for not understanding what you are talking about.
Republics have presidents as their heads of state. Constitutional monarchies have monarchs. They have very real power in theory, but in practice they are only symbolic. They exercise their power only at the request of the government.
However, it is an important and useful symbol. The monarch represents the "State" and the prime minister represents the "Government". In republics, the head of state is the same person as the head of govt - i.e. the prez. All kinds of things result from this arrangement, but one of the most interesting is that in a constitutional monarchy, you can oppose the govt without opposing the state. In other words, pissing on Tony Blair is not pissing on England. It is an institutional mechanism that enables reasonable dissent without rabid accusations of lack of patriotism or treason.
This problem is called "the tyranny of the majority." It's why the most important laws in a democracy are those that limit the power and potential actions of the government. In the US, we call those laws "The Constitution." Most successful democracies require something like this. They won't work otherwise, unless you kill or kick out everyone who's different; and we all know where that ends up.A majority of racists wants to take away the rights of a minority group. That's majority will vs. a minority group. Do you get something as simple as that, Wang?
Read above. I believed that it was self evidence why you don't want to give the majority the power to inflict crimes against the minority. <snip>
To most people I talk to, it's self-evident. Two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for dinner.
This problem is called "the tyranny of the majority." It's why the most important laws in a democracy are those that limit the power and potential actions of the government. In the US, we call those laws "The Constitution." Most successful democracies require something like this. They won't work otherwise, unless you kill or kick out everyone who's different; and we all know where that ends up.