oscuria wrote:
I honestly cannot support direct democracy. I find that it would be as disastrous as anarchism. If the people truly had their ways, I would move. Such a society would have no rights granted to the minority.
Switzerland is a direct democracy, or as close to one as is humanly possible. It is very well-governed, and direct democracy has neither bankrupted the place (it's an astonishingly rich country, the richer parts of it are essentially in a league of their own) nor sunk it into anarchy.
Ancient Athens under direct democracy became both more powerful and more prosperous; the revolution that introduced it was one of the only two revolutions in history that did not end in tears (the other one being the American Revolution).
The thing with political institutions is that, while the bad ones are inherently disastrous, the good ones are no better than the people running them.
I think the best system is a Swiss-style system; however it is not viable everywhere. It is often a case of the perfect being the enemy of the good. Representative government is also not viable everywhere, though it is more adaptable than direct democracy. Sometimes a quasi single-party republic (a la Liberal Party in postwar Japan, the PRI in post-revolutionary Mexico or to a lesser extent the Peronistas in Argentina) is the most benign type of government that is viable. Some countries however can probably only be governed by force and a relatively benign despot is the best that can be achieved.
One thing that is very refreshing about reading ancient Athenian texts is that some people openly opposed democracy as a system - lots of people today don't believe in it and would prefer some sort of oligarchy, but few of them have the guts to say so (which is part of the reason why republics sometimes degenerate into elected aristocracies).
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I am the steppenwolf that never learned to dance. (Sedaka)
El hombre es una bestia famélica, envidiosa e insaciable. (Francisco Tario)
I'm male by the way (yes, I know my avatar is misleading).