@Gambit
Theoretically, an informed populace could create a functional democratic style of governance. Practically, people who actually have the knowledge, integrity, experience, and credentials to make good decisions tend to be vastly outnumbered by the majority that is unsophisticated, and ignorant of the real issues. The masses tend to be vulnerable to social engineering and the science of appearance and persuasion, and studies in group dynamics demonstrates this quiet vividly. Political science really is the art of how much BS the masses can stomach.
Socrates, for example, made what is widely believed to be a superior compelling logical argument against the witch-hunt that democratically went on in Athens. And yet, more people voted than he be poisoned by hemlock, than the number of people who voted that he was guilty. Opinions that the ignorant masses agree upon aren't necessarily right, and very often they drone out informed/educated opinion(like Socrates). For example, informed opinion would not have elected Obama or Bush, and *many* other presidents and leaders around the world. And informed opinion wouldn't elect corrupt leaders in Greece, I was referring to their political history, not their current financial crisis.
This is the very heart of the issue with democracy. I'm having to repeat myself here, but in the golden words of a great poet of our subcontinent, democracy is a system of government where people are counted, but the value of their opinions are not weighted. Everyone's opinion does not carry the same value. A highly learned and wise person, capable of making well-informed decisions, gets the same one vote that a uneducated and uninformed person gets. And there are alot more unsophisticated and uninformed people in this world, even in places like the US where public education is mandatory.
A theocracy is not the solution, but neither is democracy. The founding father of my nation pointed out, there has *never* been a theocracy in Islamic history. The concept of European theocracies where people would by law impose their religion on others and you could only buy a place in "smaller" heaven for five pounds and "proper" heaven costed ten pounds, which was beyond what most poor people could afford. I don't want to have a religious debate here, the discussion is about democracy, not religion and theocracies. We need to think out-of-the-box, it isn't necessary to pigeon-hole ourselves into ready-made opinions and pre-defined "sides" on issues. The ignorant mullahs are highly democratic just so you know. In "mob rule", they excel in manipulating sentiments of the ignorant mob, feeding them half-truths and outright lies to support their own agenda. The mob unanimously and democratically follows, no-one forces them, they consent because they aren't sophisticated enough to see through it. There are records of Britishers "hiring" Mullahs to get the version of facts they supported, disseminated in the populace. And these Mullahs democratically drone out saner voices, for example, religious scholars like Professor Rafiq Akhtar(and other people, who make compelling and sophisticated arguments).
And this isn't only in Islam, there have been many groups and movements, religious, political, social, where this happens. Scientology, in the west, is one fascinating example of this, in modern times. There really seem to be logical and compelling reasons why democracy does not work, and your defense of it seems to be centered based on criticizing crappier alternatives. I just think that we shouldn't have to choose between bad and worse. Perhaps the genius that humanity demonstrates in so many areas, could provide better alternatives. My point remains, that logically, democracy is a flawed system of government. I'm not talking about whether other systems are flawed, or which has deeper flaws, that would be subjective and not what this thread is about.
I appologise if you felt that my questioning the validity of democracy in any mocked or insinuated that the people in the US are ignorant or brainwashed. I did not say that, and did not intend to imply that.