Zelandakh, on 2016-July-13, 08:41, said:
One comment stood out for me "people are stupid". Really? So because the people MIGHT vote to hunt down Mexicans they are less intelligent or responsible than the people who get elected then manufacture a reason to go to war and slaughter thousands of people on the pretense that there is a threat? Or who actually CAUSE a threat by their manipulation of events and interference in other country's affairs which lead to lives without any future or hope for millions of people living in refugee camps, sometimes for two and three generations? Or make decisions leading to the very real possibility, according to scientists, that the oceans are dying, the world is increasingly losing arable land to desertification, which is a direct threat to the potential of the world to feed people, a situation entirely avoidable? Or adopt policies which lead to a debt load that would have led to bankruptcy a long time ago in any normal household but that is blithely ignored as it careens ever upward? You consider that good government? It seems to me that the attitude that people are stupid is indeed the attitude that most politicians have and that's why they feel free to ignore voters wishes as soon as they get into power, and that's precisely the reason that people around the world are becoming increasingly restless with their governments.
The "elected officials" can be elected only from the people offered as choices and it seems to be often the case that the electorate is not particularly happy about any of the choices they are being given. Good examples are the apparently relatively unenthusiastic response by a whole lot of Americans to the choices in the upcoming Presidential election, or indeed the rate of voter turnout in most western elections.
The vast majority of politicians seem to believe that their responsibility is not to the people but to their party, come hell or high water. No matter what the party, the objective is to get elected, obviously, and then to stay in power, so electoral districts are rearranged; failed politicians get parachuted into "secure" ridings so as to get back into power; voter eligibility is restricted and all sorts of other shenanigans employed to tilt the odds in their favor are common tactics. What has any of that got to do with democracy?
I think the concept that people are stupid is a very unfortunate and arrogant attitude. People may be ill/misinformed, scared, they may be manipulated and forced into situations they don't understand and don't know how to cope with. But I most decidedly do NOT buy into the idea that because someone was elected they are automatically wiser or better informed or any more capable of making a good decision than anyone else. What being elected demonstrates is a desire to have power, for whatever purpose, and that they know how to get elected, usually as much a result of being a good party member, as anything else. That's all. To assume otherwise is like assuming that someone who rode the winning horse at the Kentucky Derby will automatically be adept at playing bridge.
I also don't believe that the majority of people are vicious and hostile by nature, but that much of today's world is pushing people into defensiveness. When something like the Japanese tsunami, or the Katrina hurricane happens, for sure there were some who tried to take advantage, but there were thousands more who tried to help. So where is this deep mistrust of and disdain for common people coming from and were the Founding Fathers so entirely wrong in trying to set up a system entrusting people's own future to them rather than to what is virtually a self selected group?
This post has been edited by barmar: 2016-July-14, 08:33
Reason for edit: fix qutoing