THE basic assumption of democracy is that all adult men and women should have an equal share in deciding how their country is governed.
Some of them are wealthier than others, some have sharper minds, some prefer Mozart to Bono, or vice versa.
No matter. Provided they are reasonably sane, they are all equally part of the democracy.
That concept sits oddly alongside the fact that, in most of the 'democratic' world, all but a few hundred men and women have no democratic function.
Except, that is, to cast a vote every now and again for one or another of a variety of parties that offer them a complicated list of proposals.
Some proposals they like, but others they do not like; and between those occasional votes, the few hundred exceptions, plus the civil servants under their command, make all the actual law-making decisions.
This is not really representation. It is, in the long periods between elections, just a transfer of power to the few. An 'elective dictatorship' as Lord Hailsham famously called it.
In direct democracy, the voters do not merely vote every few years to elect a parliament and a president, and then leave it to these people to represent them until the next election comes along.
This story is from the Issue 48, August 2024 edition of The Light.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the Issue 48, August 2024 edition of The Light.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Egged on to comply with register
Owners threatened with jail if their chickens undeclared
Political warfare against Amish
Religious community threatening globalist agenda
Fired up for early retirement
Achieving true financial independence is well within your reach
Obscene wealth of royal family
Any criticism of the Monarchy’s wealth opens the door to flak from Royalist propagandists
Why did Zuckerberg confess now?
ON many subjects important to public life today, vast numbers of people know the truth, and yet the official channels of information-sharing are reluctant to admit it.
Waging war on the elderly
You've never had it so bad: Governed by sociopaths
Budget for the people
Governments spend billions on things nobody wants
Death probe shifts blame from shots
Inquiry into young man’s death fails to address deadly injection
'Hospital killed dad with midazolam'
Woman told her father would be home soon hours later he was dead
Illusion of freedom
Tyranny effective when disguised as democracy’.