LeveragedBuyout
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Yeah but the problem is we can't comprehend another country's extreme situations quite easily. Usually in an extreme situation we simply point our finger directly to that country's regime. On the hand we can handle "occasional" extremities without really pointing finger at anything fundemental. We just say oh it happens and continue our lives.
I suppose there are two schools of thought on this, and agreement isn't possible if we each belong to the two separate schools. One school holds that certain morals are absolute (e.g. suppression of the citizenry is essentially evil), and the other posits that morals are relative (e.g. in collectivist societies, suppression of the citizenry can be good, even while it may be evil in individualist societies). I belong to the former, it appears that you belong to the latter. As they say, agree to disagree.
News coverages about systems other than democracy are very prejudiced and completely shallow. We do criticize those regimes purely on theoretical grounds and we are not able to grasp the true dynamics that creates their social problems.
This is necessarily so, per my argument above. the US Declaration of Independence states:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.
Perhaps those words come across as shallow to you, but I daresay that most Americans truly believe this. Not that all men are created equal, but some are more equal than others, but rather all men are created equal, full stop. And that governments are only legitimate if their mandate is derived from the governed (e.g. some form of elections). As is often said, American values are universalist (or in my paradigm, absolutist) values, which means that we believe Chinese citizens should have the same rights in our country that Americans have in America. Some view this as a kind of cultural imperalism, but there is no ill intent here. We believe everyone deserves the same freedoms that we have, because we generally believe in the goodness of mankind, in the best Lockean tradition.
Our news coverage stems from that tradition, generally. Is governance just? Is it inclusive? If not, arguments centering on "differences in culture" are not convincing to Americans, because we have seen and absorbed all the cultures in the world, and have forged a unitary nation out of those different cultures.
Again, agree to disagree.
We don't understand their extremes. We don't understand their initial points, how would it be a 100$ gdp per capita economy. And we say "make elections and everything is gonna be allright". That's our problem.
Really, though, who is saying this? With all due respect, this seems like a strawman to me.
They are constantly living in a situation that the west would define as extreme. And their normalization process is taking decades. Their grandmothers were raped in their own houses in Nanking yet we side with Japan because it's a liberal democracy and we need to counter balance China.
I don't doubt that China has unique challenges that the US has never encountered and cannot understand. But if nothing else, the latest version of China's dynastic system, as embodied in the CCP, shows that history repeats itself if one pursues the same strategies, and the CCP is pursuing the same dynastic model as the emperors, except now it's a party that has a mandate of heaven instead of an individual. Does the CCP really have the flexibility to adapt to the changing world and outsmart the market, when no other totalitarian polity has been able to do so? Only time will tell.
We don't side with Japan because we need to counter China. We side with Japan because Japan accepted our offer of alliance (initially through conquest, later by free will), while China violently rejected our offer of alliance, even though we fought a World War on their behalf.
Can you even think what kind of a nationalistic wibe that a rising Japanese military would pursue in China? And we will say "Oh CCP is fueling nationalism to protect it's sovereignty. If you ask me CCP is "acting" like a nationalist on many occasions to answer the nationalistic wibe resulting from the traumas from the past that is burried deep down in Chinese civil society. Those people weren't even able to get a proper closure both from the West (because of colonization) and from Japan(because of invasion). Our ignorance about these societies blinds our sight and our prejudices makes us blame the usual suspect for their current problems : their regimes.
There's a strange parallel here between China's enduring victimhood and Japan's denial of history. Each could overcome the past by rectifying their educational systems to reflect the truth, but it serves each country's interest to propagate a distorted view of the past. I can't imagine China's trauma, true, but I also can't imagine the endless embrace of victimhood even as China emerges as the new global superpower. It's not in the American psyche to propagate such an inferiority complex, or tie our perception of ourselves to the behavior of another country. It's entirely within China's power to ignore the relatively insignificant Japan and move on, but it has not.
As discussed previously, the Japanese invasion was not the first trauma China has suffered in its history. But it does seem to be the first trauma that China will not allow itself to get over.
Yeah but even with all of those mechanisms we still have a lot of corruption that are known. And so many unlawful acts that remains unknown. There are so many "unknown unknowns" for an average citizen in a democracy. Yet we still preach the rest of the world like we are perfect because we make elections.
Another strawman? I would appreciate a citation. I have never seen a claim that the US regards itself as perfect, and certainly not because we are a democracy. In fact, we even regard ourselves as better than the other democracies, which would not be possible if the only important factor were elections.
Better, but not perfect. If we regarded ourselves as perfect, we would have no need for an independent judiciary or adversarial media, and indeed, one can find the harshest critics of the US in the US itself, even without the endless anti-American propaganda coming from outside.
Governments are growing day by day and they are inventing new institutions to make us feel safe from government overreach. And here we are, those institutions don't work. We say independent judicial branch and even the mafia infiltrated that branch both in US and in Turkey and in tons of other countries. Our judicial branches doesn't even know half the government's activity. Do you think any court in US would approve MKUltra project in 1950's? Random guys were given LSD by CIA without their knowledge. Yet we learned what happened in 1990's when those files were declassified. 40 years later. How can we be sure that there aren't any inhumane projects like this currently ongoing and no one knows? This is all result of a big government.
Yes, as stated above, we are not perfect. Big government is evil, and I do what I can to combat big government. But the strength of our system is that our flaws are exposed, debated, and acted upon through the democratic process. That makes us adaptable and robust, even if it appears messy in the short-term. In non-democracies, these incidents are permanently hidden from public view, and no debate is possible. If the leadership is enlightened, it will adjust. If it is not, G-d help the citizenry. I know which system I would choose, but it appears we're reaching an impasse.
Again, agree to disagree.
When US entered WW2 it had the size of an army equal to the army of Yugoslavia. Yet within weeks it was able to mobilize it's entire population for it's military industrial complex. That was the American way of war. You have a tiny army in peace time and when you go to war God help to your adversary you mobilize everything. Today US has the biggest army on Earth that has the potential power to wipe out the entire population on Earth several times standing still. And we are in the peace time. Can you see how inefficient and corrupt is that? I'm not expert on American history but I'm sure that founding fathers did not intend that. Bit by bit our freedoms were taken from our hands (our never really given).
Actually, history taught even our founding fathers hard lessons in the form of the Barbary Wars:
1) Per Trotsky: You may not be interested in war, but war is interested in you.
2) si vis pacem, para bellum (if you want peace, prepare for war). Pre-WWII, we have always been caught unprepared. No more.
3) Isolationism doesn't keep us out of war (WWI, WWII).
It is only in WWII that we finally digested the lessons and acted upon them. I support a strong military-industrial complex, because the alternative is far worse.
We need smaller governments in size. Government should only provide the basic social order and protects the private ownerships. If you ask me about the today's problems in our governments, I would prefer an independent Tea Party any day against those establishment Republicans. And prefer such parties in Turkey. And a Tea Party-like single party rule in China would be great.
We are in total agreement.
Yeah that's the biggest problem. We say power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. But what about a single party rule in a powerless state? Do you think that would also make our politicians egotistical maniacs?
Yes, it's entirely possible, and it has happened before. Sweden had made some horrible blunders under its long socialist single-party rule, even though they had a democratic mandate. Japan's LDP hasn't shown much competence since the 1980s despite having a lock on the electorate. I am worried about the way the AKP is using democracy to destroy Turkey's democracy.
And yet, I have yet to see a better alternative.
Thank you (and @Genesis ) for the intellectually stimulating discussion. It's a breath of fresh air on PDF.