Sign Up |  Live StatsLive Stats    Articles 35,345| Comments 159,810| Members 17,821, Newest cdotkhn| Online 263
Home Contact
 (Forgotten?): 
    Sikhism

   
                                                                     Your Banner Here!    

Sikh Philosophy Network » Sikh Philosophy Network » Current Affairs » People & Opinion » Imagining a World Without Dictators

Imagining a World Without Dictators

Our Donation Goal : Why Donate? : Donate Today! : Donate Anonymously (ਗੁਪਤ) : Our Family of Supporters
Goal this month: 400 USD, Received: 35 USD (9%)
Please Donate...
Related Topics...
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
End of the World Harwinder General Discussion 5 12-Apr-2011 11:10 AM
Our Dance with Arab Dictators Soul_jyot World 1 29-Mar-2011 09:38 AM
Time to Cut Mideast Dictators Loose Soul_jyot Politics 0 30-Jan-2011 20:23 PM
Dictators, Web Tools, and Change spnadmin Politics 0 30-Jan-2011 02:44 AM
Will the world end or not? sikhsoldier Sikh Youth 21 11-Jan-2007 08:17 AM


Tags
dictators, imagining, world
Reply Post New Topic In This Forum Stay Connected to Sikhism, Click Here to Register Now!
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 29-Aug-2011, 19:53 PM
Soul_jyot's Avatar Soul_jyot Soul_jyot is offline
 
Enrolled: Jan 7th, 2005
Location: Metro-Vancouver, B.C., Canada
Posts: 2,841
Soul_jyot is a jewel in the roughSoul_jyot is a jewel in the roughSoul_jyot is a jewel in the roughSoul_jyot is a jewel in the roughSoul_jyot is a jewel in the roughSoul_jyot is a jewel in the roughSoul_jyot is a jewel in the roughSoul_jyot is a jewel in the roughSoul_jyot is a jewel in the roughSoul_jyot is a jewel in the roughSoul_jyot is a jewel in the roughSoul_jyot is a jewel in the roughSoul_jyot is a jewel in the rough
   
Adherent: Sikhism
Liked 2,642 Times in 1,187 Posts
    Nationality: Canada
Imagining a World Without Dictators

  Donate Today!   Email to Friend  Tell a Friend   Show Printable Version  Print   Contact sikhphilosophy.net Administraion for any Suggestions, Ideas, Feedback.  Feedback  

Register to Remove Advertisements
August 26, 2011

Imagining a world without dictators

By William J. Dobson, Published: August 26

A month ago, I was sitting in a restaurant with Srdja Popovic, a democratic activist and leader of the revolution that toppled Slobodan Milosevic in 2000. We had met to discuss the revolutions ricocheting around the Middle East.

“It’s been a bad year for bad guys,” he said. In late 2010, he mused, no one would have possibly predicted that six months later, “Ben Ali and Mubarak would be out, Gaddafi and Saleh would be on their knees, and Assad would be seriously challenged. If you would have seen that in your crystal ball and then told people on TV, men in white coats would have come to take you away.”

This past week, the dictator’s club lost another member. When Libyan rebels stormed Moammar Gaddafi’s compound and seat of power in Tripoli, he went from a bizarre, mercurial Arab tyrant to a fugitive of justice. Libya is the newest piece in the Arab Spring jigsaw puzzle, which when connected to Tunisia and Egypt has created a dictator-free zone across a growing stretch of North Africa.
Reference:: Sikh Philosophy Network http://www.sikhphilosophy.net/people-and-opinion/36804-imagining-a-world-without-dictators.html

But why should it end with North Africa, or even the Middle East? The truth is that a world without dictators may not be such a lark. Yes, it has never been harder than it is today to be a dictator. An army of Western experts and activists now stands at the ready to shine a spotlight on human rights abuses or gross corruption. If you order a violent crackdown, you know it probably will be captured on an iPhone and broadcast around the world in real time.

Totalitarianism, the ultimate expression of dictatorship, is virtually extinct. It was just too expensive. The Joseph Stalins, Pol Pots, and Idi Amins belong to a distinctly 20th-century version of dictatorship. No one wants to be North Korea or Burma. Police states are passé. Maybe we don’t need to fear the men in white coats after all.

And picture, for a moment, the benefits of a dictator-free world. No more rogue regimes sponsoring terrorists or giving haven to mass murderers. No more famines in North Korea. The humanitarian benefits would be enormous. Once the last tyrant had fallen, imagine the creativity that would pour forth from the millions of people who had known nothing besides fear, repression and the best ways to survive it. We could build a museum to dictatorship — perhaps in Rangoon — where we could view their portraits, remember their crimes and wonder how men (they’re almost all men) could be so cruel to so many.
Reference:: Sikh Philosophy Network http://www.sikhphilosophy.net/showthread.php?t=36804

Just one problem: The end of some of the harshest dictatorships has not necessarily spelled a more free world. The extinction of the thing we despise is not giving rise to the democracy we hoped for. According to the watchdog organization Freedom House, political freedom has declined around the world for the fifth consecutive year, the longest continuous decline since it started monitoring these trends in 1973. Furthermore, the number of fully functioning electoral democracies is the lowest it has been since 1995.

What we see instead is the rise of electoral strongmen, figures such as Vladimir Putin and Hugo Chavez, who go to great lengths to maintain a thin democratic façade to hide the fact that they have concentrated power in their own hands. Russia’s back yard is littered with authoritarian regimes — Azerbaijan, Belarus and Uzbekistan, to name a few — whose leaders seem to view their positions as lifetime appointments. China thankfully is no longer ruled by a Mao-like figure, but in some ways its economic success has made it more insidious; strongmen and would-be authoritarians look to it as a beacon of nondemocratic strength. Some in Asia may be softer — Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore — but they are no pillars of Jeffersonian democracy.

Political scientists are at pains to establish the proper species of many of these regimes. Are they “semi-authoritarian,” “hybrid,” “pseudodemocratic” or something else? Suffice it to say, they are not democracies.

Nor does history move in some uninterrupted line of progress. The transition from dictatorship to democracy is full of false starts and retreats. Some of the revolutions we recently applauded have led to governments with a shaky handle on the democratic tenets they once espoused. In Georgia and Kyrgyzstan, the leaders who rode the revolution to power quickly displayed familiar authoritarian reflexes, choking free media and tightening civil liberties. In Ukraine, the Orange Revolution prevented Viktor Yanukovych from stealing an election in 2005. In 2010, he returned, this time winning elections that most say were free and fair. The fact that he won isn’t a problem; he was the people’s choice. The trouble is that since coming to office, he has proved to be the authoritarian bully we remember, intimidating civil society groups, undermining press freedoms and bringing trumped-up charges against his political enemies.

It is too early to say what the Arab Spring will yield, either. The Egyptian military has promised to steer the country toward democracy, but its behavior since Hosni Mubarak was ousted — which includes arbitrary arrests, military trials for thousands of civilians and forced “virginity tests” for female protestors — hardly inspires confidence. As welcome as the collapse of Gaddafi’s reign must be for Libyans, building a pluralistic democratic society from the ruins of his regime will be much harder than the march on Tripoli.

Of course, Libyans deserve to celebrate their victory. Next week would have marked the 42nd anniversary of Gaddafi’s rule. Now that day will never come. Twenty years ago, Eastern Europeans showed the way. Today the people in Libya, and across the Middle East, are demonstrating that the most entrenched dictators can be challenged, and in some cases, uprooted. What about Africa or Asia? No one would be crazy for thinking it could happen again.

wjdobson2012@gmail.com


William J. Dobson, a former managing editor of Foreign Policy magazine and senior editor for Asia at Newsweek International, is writing a book about dictatorships.

source:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinio...JgJ_print.html





 
Do share your immediate thoughts or reactions on this issue? We value your views! Login Now! or Sign Up Today! to share your views with us.. Gurfateh!
Reply With Quote
The following member appreciates Soul_jyot Ji for the above message.
Sponsored Links
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 30-Aug-2011, 20:51 PM
ac_marshall's Avatar ac_marshall ac_marshall is offline
 
Enrolled: Nov 5th, 2009
Location: Bangalore, India
Posts: 132
ac_marshall is on a distinguished roadac_marshall is on a distinguished roadac_marshall is on a distinguished road
   
Adherent: Humanism
Liked 254 Times in 101 Posts
    Nationality: India
Re: Imagining a World Without Dictators

Unfortunately, the term "dictator" at present only applies to military rulers. The elected dictators and dynasty politicians also have to go for the good of the world.
Reply With Quote
The following member appreciates ac_marshall Ji for the above message.
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 30-Aug-2011, 20:58 PM
Ambarsaria's Avatar Ambarsaria Ambarsaria is offline
ੴ / Ik▫oaʼnkār
 
Enrolled: Dec 21st, 2010
Posts: 2,720
Ambarsaria is just really nice
Ambarsaria is just really niceAmbarsaria is just really niceAmbarsaria is just really nice
   
Adherent: Sikhi
Liked 3,963 Times in 1,899 Posts
    Nationality: Canada
Re: Imagining a World Without Dictators

  Donate Today!  
There will always be rulers/kings/dictators/bureaucratic-system and you can give the name to their effective practices as you wish. Till the people sustaining or making selection don't become wise for their own good, it will be all the same.
Reference:: Sikh Philosophy Network http://www.sikhphilosophy.net/showthread.php?t=36804
Reference:: Sikh Philosophy Network http://www.sikhphilosophy.net/showthread.php?t=36804

Without fail the rulers/kings/dictators/bureaucratic-system tries to maintain confusion, ignorance and low self-esteem in the populace to sustain itself.

Sat Sri Akal.
Reply With Quote
The following members appreciate Ambarsaria Ji for the above message.
   Click Here to Donate Now!

Support Us!
Become a Promoter!
Gurfateh ji, you can become a SPN Promoter by Donating as little as $10 each month. With limited resources & high operational costs, your donations make it possible for us to deliver a quality website and spread the teachings of the Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji, to serve & uplift humanity. Every contribution counts. Donate Generously. Gurfateh!
ReplyPost New Topic In This Forum Stay Connected to Sikhism, Click Here to Register Now!

Bookmarks


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Tools Search
Search:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

» Gurbani Jukebox
Listen to Gurbani while surfing SPN!
» Active Discussions
sikhism need urgent advice.......
Today 17:07 PM
13 Replies, 138 Views
sikhism How important is Matha...
Today 15:22 PM
66 Replies, 1,099 Views
sikhism On a Scale of Most...
Today 13:10 PM
31 Replies, 1,292 Views
sikhism Sikh Diamonds Video...
Today 13:06 PM
7 Replies, 131 Views
sikhism Who is "Mohan"?
Today 13:00 PM
23 Replies, 392 Views
sikhism Herman Hesse,...
Today 12:40 PM
14 Replies, 238 Views
sikhism Considering Cutting My...
Today 11:05 AM
123 Replies, 3,956 Views
sikhism ਨਾਮਾ
Today 06:37 AM
2 Replies, 63 Views
sikhism Are Creator and Creation...
Today 01:30 AM
44 Replies, 2,854 Views
sikhism I became victim by...
Yesterday 19:50 PM
0 Replies, 54 Views
sikhism Sikh Books downloads
Yesterday 15:39 PM
2 Replies, 77 Views
sikhism Salok Sheikh Farid ji...
Yesterday 09:35 AM
0 Replies, 52 Views
sikhism In Punjab, three farmers...
Yesterday 05:36 AM
0 Replies, 52 Views
sikhism Supernatural Sikhs, what...
Yesterday 03:45 AM
19 Replies, 419 Views
sikhism Sukhmani Sahib Astpadi...
26-May-2012 22:57 PM
0 Replies, 56 Views
» Books You Should Read...
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v3.2.2

All times are GMT +6.5. The time now is 17:13 PM.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.6
Copyright ©2000 - 2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.5.2 Copyright © 2004-12, All Rights Reserved. Sikh Philosophy Network


Page generated in 0.40032 seconds with 29 queries