ninja_yodeler wrote:another bad thing about the U.S government you just reminded me of.
the war on terrorism...THE U.S INVENTED TERRORISM..Hiroshima anyone
Hardly. The principle has been around for millennia. Read your history books a bit better. Hell, just read the Bible. (I'm thinking of the books of Joshua and 1st and 2nd Samuel if I recall right.) Jehovah ordered the Israelites to slaughter their enemies to a man, including their livestock and children.
jorb wrote:spectacle wrote:jorb wrote:What I am suggesting is that democracy virtually ensures that nothing and no one but bad and dangerous men will ever reach the government top.
Agreed. A system where the first person to touch a large, flaming animal skull is the ruler would work much better.
At least that process doesn't explicitly select and promote those most ruthless at playing the politics of party and power.
I'm not going to disagree with your first statement at all. I believe that power corrupts and power attracts others wanting said power. No matter what system in place, anyone having power over anyone else will create a system of corruption. So how does the last part differ in any way from a democracy?
In a democracy of any sort, be it a true democracy (which could never succeed for many reasons in anything larger than a small community) or some for of republic where the representatives of the people are elected officials, the people have a choice of who to put up there. Sometimes it's not much of a choice as the requirements are that the person usually already have some amount of money and power (and thus corrupted). In the second system (one person struggles to the top to gain power), the populace just has to deal with the "might makes right" problems that has gone on for millenia. What's to prevent the person that gets to the top from cheating his way up there? And once there, how is he removed?
I think all this comes down to some personal philosophies on life. Do we support and nurture one another? Do we try to compete to be the top dog? Should we just leave each other alone to live their own lives out? There are many more questions to be asked. How each of us answers dictates in many ways how we want to interact with others and the needs for some sort of governing body.
In a "perfect" society, we could probably get by without any government whatsoever. We just wouldn't need because we'd cooperate when we needed to and let each of us live our own lives as we saw fit otherwise. However, this is far from a perfect society. We have to have someone to intervene in our problems when we can't resolve them ourselves. Until someone actually proposes a better system than democracy, I'll continue to believe in what we have wrought.
I think this discussion is a perfect reason why I play H&H (and other political-centric games such as EVE). It shows that we, as people, will organize ourselves in various ways to try and protect self interests. I think it's been proven that in a closed system, for a certain sized population, something resembling a totalitarian regime is most successful. However, how do you apply this to tens of millions of people with diverse wants and interests? It becomes difficult at best, and near impossible in the most normal of circumstances.
As a note, I'm not happy with the current American government. It has fallen to only giving lip service to "separation of church and state" as well as fallen to greed and corruption. I do believe that we have fallen away from some of the thoughts and philosophies of the founding fathers, but not in the way many of the Tea Party would like the country to think. (As a note, I'm a registered LIbertarian, but usually vote Democrat because I can't stand the thought of elected officials gaining office by thumping their Bible. The Teabaggers can suck my left nut.)