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Ask Not What Your Country Can Do For You

Jun 21, 2016
by Caroline Miller
Democracy Is So 2005, global decline in democratic societies, Hillary Clinton, Joshua Kurlantzick, misconceptions about democracy, why autocrats win elections
2 Comments

Recently, I read a woman’s blog in which she insisted  she would never, ever vote for Hillary Clinton.  Clinton, she insisted, was a liar and a bad, bad person.  I suggest anyone  interested in facts instead of drivel look here: (Click)

Whatever the hard feelings, the time has come for the politically righteous to heed the words of Jack Kennedy and consider what they can do for their country, because, believe me, democracy is in trouble.  Between 1970 to the mid 2000s, democracies flowered all over the globe. (“Democracy Is So 2005,” by Joshua Kurlantzick, Bloomberg Businessweek, June 6-12, 2016, pg. 6)  Since that time, the trend has suffered a dramatic decline.  (“2015 Freedom House” report, Ibid pg. 6.)  Why?  Because people, too eager to see the fruits of reform, elected autocrats: strong men whom they imaged would cut the red tape and redistribute wealth instantly. Instead, these strong men made a joke of the ballot box.  They kept their citizens at each other’s throats until the government had accumulated enough power to crush any opposition.  We know these leaders. We can name them.  And the record shows such tyrants leave their countries poorer.

One of the common misconceptions about a democratic government is that it controls the economy.  It doesn’t.  As writer Joshua Krulantzick observes, democracies  work best as providers of safety nets: health, welfare and human services.(Ibid pg. 7)  Presidents are happy to take a bow when an economy is on an upswing,  but in truth, a democratic government has few tools with which to stimulate growth.  Regulation is its primary power and too much of that can send jobs and companies overseas.

Another common misconception is that the mass media will provide objective information about elected leaders.  People say they suspect the news but when they find an article that supports their opinion, they cling to it as if it were gospel rather suffer the inconvenience of opening their minds.  Unfortunately, the  mass media has ceased to serve as the Fourth Estate — if it ever did.  Certainly, they are no unblemished guardians of Truth, Justice and the American way. They  may inadvertently do  good,  but their main objective is to  sell advertisement.  A candidate for public office who is colorful, outrageous and who taps into the country’s anger doesn’t need to buy campaign coverage.  The media will provide it free because it increases readership.  A person of no political experience can look like a leader if his face is everywhere.  Nothing convinces like repetition.  As the cliché goes, bad coverage is still coverage.

John F. Kennedy

Courtesy of communitytable.com

With the 2016 election upon us, the purists are  standing at the cross roads: whether to participate in the rite of the ballot box — which soldiers have given their lives to protect — or to  reject the election as  a charade.  Many of them describe  the choice before them as  being between the lesser of two evils. What they really mean is their candidate didn’t make the ballot and they’d rather pout than participate.  Go ahead.  Bask in your virtue and sell your country down the river, knowing a would-be autocrat is waiting in the wings.  At least you’ll make China happy:  Americans know elections cannot really change their lives…why not support Trump and vent their spleen?” ( Chinese editorial, Ibid, pg. 7.)

 

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2 Comments
  1. MaryBeth Kelly June 21, 2016 at 10:37 am Reply
    Chilling thoughts there, Caroline.
    • Caroline Miller June 21, 2016 at 12:03 pm Reply
      A little shock therapy for dreamers. Thanks for your comment, MaryBeth.

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Contact Caroline at

carolinemiller11@yahoo.com

Portland, Oregon author Caroline Miller had distinguished careers as an educator, union president, elected official and artist/advocate.

Her play, Woman on the Scarlet Beast, was performed at the Post5 Theatre, Portland, OR, January/February 2015

Caroline published a serialized novelette, Marie Eau-Claire, on the website, The Colored Lens.  She also published the story Gustav Pavel,  a parable about ordinary lives, choice and alternate potential, on the website Fixional.co.

Caroline has published four novels

  • Ballet Noir
  • Trompe l’Oeil
  • Gothic Spring
  • Heart Land

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