jimboston wrote:So it’s certainly true that different cultures with different histories, values, languages, and modes of thoughts, etc. will both want/prefer and be able handle/control different forms of gov’t.
The arrogance of most people in ‘the West’ is that ‘we’ feel our form of government is ‘the best’ and therefore every other person/nation on the face of the planet must also want THE EXACT SAME THING. This has gotten ‘us’ into trouble over and over again. Sometime we try to ‘help’ countries become ‘democratic’ only to find that this imposed form of gov’t doesn’t take. Other times we have ‘helped’ establish a democratic system only to find that the people of that country hate us, and then they start using their new democratic powers to establish policies we don’t like or (more frequently) policies that US business doesn’t like. It’s a dangerous game to play, but still ‘we’ (the West) continue to play it over and over.
Another complicating factor is that most people in ‘the West’ don’t even really understand our own form of gov’t. People here throw out the term Democracy, and think that defines our form of government... it really doesn’t. You might call the USA a ‘Democratic Republic’ or a ‘Constitutional Republic’... but we’re not a true ‘Democracy’. I dare say that no one here would really want to live in a total ‘pure’ Democracy. It would be unmanageable especially on the scale of a country the size of the US. I live in a Town were we still have olde fashion ‘Town Meetings’. If you’ve never experienced a New England style Town Meeting let me tell you, you’re not missing much. It’s an antiquated and unwieldy system. It probably worked well in the 1700’s when it was setup... and it likely serviced the local towns throughout the 19th century and most of the 20th, when the town was smaller and most people new each other and worked locally. Today it makes no sense, and there is a movement to reform it in my town, but that itself is going to be a cluster-f**k.... and that’s in a town with a population less than 20K. How hard is it to reform a system that governs 1.4 billion people?
China’s not perfect... the gov’t certainly likes to control information in a way that offends Western sensibilities, but this is primarily a tool the gov’t is using to ‘manage’ change. China has changed for the better in the past 30 years. It’s more free, the economy is better, and the lives of more people are better now than they were 30 years back. That’s progress. Who are ‘we’ to say it’s the wrong kind of progress or not fast enough? If China just dropped all control tomorrow it’s likely there would be a lot of chaos, and once that happens how can you be sure that the change you get is good? The ‘West’ would do well to have a little more respect for China, especially where it’s internal issues don’t impact us. Perhaps then we would be able to focus on where their actions affect other countries, and we’d get more cooperation?
Hmm- why not let the people decide? I appreciate your arguments, but you seem to hate that idea.