Of course Yeltsin was a big part of the problem too.
Of course Yeltsin was a big part of the problem too.
We didn't need to impose democracy. Russia had democracy for a time. The Marshall Plan was about economic investment. The transition from communism to capitalism was a very rough one for the Soviet people, and that's a big part of why democracy failed.
It was also about stabilising a war-torn continent’s economy. To keep them from going communist.
Which worries me about the USA, it's pretty hit or miss at the moment.
But there are also things that can affect who wants it, or what people think "it" is, or how they think you should get there. What people want is not an independent variable unaffected by anything else.
Myanmar's another one. India's been restricting its people's rights lately.
Democracy takes a while to establish as a stable system and often fails.
Alexander the Great was granting (non-representative) democracies to cities in Asia Minor 2400 years ago, I wonder what he'd think of Erdogan.
Look at the people today who decry chinese investment in the US economy? I'm not even saying those people are wrong.
All it takes is for one person or group in the country to poke us enough to the point where we feel the need to strengthen our security posture there (read: add more troops) and then some terrible situation like Abu Ghraib completely destroys any credibility we have with the local population and it just spirals into disaster.
I simply have no faith left in our government's ability to execute even a completely peaceful operation like the marshall plan (and similarly what we did in Japan).
Where the politicians were less corrupt, the free market worked spectacularly well, like in Poland.
To be fair, things probably work better when you don’t put people with that ideology in charge of said government.
It’s like picking a flat-Earther as an astronaut.
This long history of democratic rule was not present in many modern attempts to establish democracies.
That's from the preamble of the 2016 Republican platform (the most recent one since they declined to publish one in 2020 in lieu of just doing whatever Donald Trump said); literally their statement of values. But I've long believed that Republicans rely on voters who don't actually know what they're voting for, so your anecdote does strengthen that impression of mine.
I'm not sure we now know a guaranteed way of how to deal with situations like that.
Best description of the cultural background i found so far was this:
Federalist No_14 also had a lot to say on the matter: “In a democracy, the people meet and exercise the government in person; in a republic, they assemble and administer it by their representatives and agents. A democracy, consequently, will be confined to a small spot. A republic may be extended over a large region.”
[1] https://ar.usembassy.gov/education-culture/irc/u-s-governmen...
Certain degrees of federalism are, I think, common across the political spectrum, not only describe Republicans.
Based on your quote, they didn't understand that representative democracy is still democracy? The internet lessons the need for representatives, since we don't need to travel to talk to each other anymore.
The US embassy thinks otherwise: https://ar.usembassy.gov/education-culture/irc/u-s-governmen...
I am not a zoomer and I agree with the commenter you are replying to. Most of the "west" has a form of government that is a representative democracy (most of them as republics, but quite a few as constitutional monarchies as well), including the US.
Most people would not waste their time nitpicking the usage of such a widely accepted term.
https://web.archive.org/web/20200215230538/https://ourworldi...
Most republicans are not anarcho-libertarians. Asserting that any government is bad is fringe even among libertarians, and most republicans aren't even libertarians.
For some reason the US embassy still finds it important enough to broadcast the difference to the rest of the world: https://ar.usembassy.gov/education-culture/irc/u-s-governmen... Could you explain that?
-Ronald Reagan
Perhaps you know that Reagan didn't really mean it, but it seems like many people believed him anyway.
Also, now we have facebook.
This is my understanding as well, from everything I’ve read. The more interesting question is why Russia, both as a nation state and a culture, has no history or tradition of democracy. I’ve never received an answer to this question.
I think you surely know it too, Reagan was all too eager to use government power and his supporters were happy to see him do it.
While often categorized as a democracy, the United States is more accurately defined as a constitutional federal republic.
notice the wording "more accurately" and not "mischaracterized" etc--
btw... whats the point in arguing the u.s isn't a democracy?
are you trying to say that people shouldn't be able to decide their leaders?
Capitalism is based on private property rights, and individual economic freedoms to buy and sell your labour or property. That means it’s fundamentally reliant on the robust rule of law to enforce those rights, the rights of those purchasing property and services, etc. It’s those rights that enable the trust required for a functioning market. Corporatist, oligarchic and cartel based systems are often described as capitalist, but they’re really not capitalist because they don’t respect individual rights over capital any more than communism does. Like communism they’re just stitch-ups.
The role played by the rule of law often gets down played or even criticised by libertarian free marketeers. They think it’s needless regulation and just government interfering in free markets. But without the rule of law you get bloody free for alls like in Russia in the 90s.
Absolutely agree with you. Long-term, I think the stable state for Russia is a deconstruction of the old empire and a global commitment to Marshall Plan the resulting republics into modernity.
The US is a respresentative democracy that is also a constitutional republic.
Denmark is a representative democracy that is also a constitutional monarchy.
Canada is a representative democracy that is also an unconstitutional monarchy.
Russia is a kind-of-if-you-squint-but-not-really-representative oligarchy-slash-autocracy that is also a constitutional republic.
Whether or not a country has a constitution, or is a republic has almost no bearing on how it is actually governed.
> btw... whats the point in arguing the u.s isn't a democracy?
because a typical follow-up discussion usually starts with "so where's the popular vote?" and this diminishes the principle of fair representation of smaller states of the federal republic.
I never claimed that. You are trying to address a non-existing point.
Aslo, being in minority has never been an indicator of wrong by default, so I don't see why you had to mention it. At least I know that the US embassy also finds it important to remind everyone about the difference [1].
> or that the term 'constitutional republic' says literally anything about how a country is governed. [...] Whether or not a country has a constitution, or is a republic has almost no bearing on how it is actually governed.
It does have a significant bearing on applicability of popular vote in a given federation.
[1] https://ar.usembassy.gov/education-culture/irc/u-s-governmen...
There's a certain segment who seem very adamant that this is a very important argument to win against "the left". But I've never met any "leftist" who cares particularly - most seem to shrug, concede the label and move on.
I'm pretty much in agreement. The US is a democracy in the wide sense in that it uses a democratic process to choose government. It's also true that it's a representative democracy in that the process works by people choosing representatives. So sure - constitutional federal republic.
But why does anyone think this is particularly important, and why is this seen as something that there is any left/right distinction on is beyond me.
Oh wow, so that's why this is seen as a left/right thing?
I'm not from the US (and therefore way left for the US) and I think assuring representation of the less populous states is very important.
I think the first-past-the-post voting system used in the US is a much bigger problem than this.
> The United States is a representative democracy.
https://www.uscis.gov/sites/default/files/document/lesson-pl...
You argue that the capitalist system presupposes these rights and the rule of law; I would say that historically speaking capital itself (more importantly its production process) presupposes these rights and capitalism presupposes capital.
> because a typical follow-up discussion usually starts with "so where's the popular vote?" and this diminishes the principle of fair representation of smaller states of the federal republic.
thanks for clarifying.just to be upfront, im not sure i agree, but in any case i think stating that upfront is better than debating words "democracy" vs "republic", people will miss the point (or not get what your trying to say)
Capitalism is commonly defined as a system of economics based on private ownership, and associated rights such as free exchange of labour, free markets, etc as against state ownership. Systems based on cartels, oligarchies and corporatist systems aren’t capitalist because the oligarchs, corporatist entities, etc become part of the state system. They assume powers normally the prerogative of the state. Obviously there are different degrees, no two systems are identical and all such systems have some level of private ownership and trade. It’s all a matter of degree. Even the Soviet Union had some level of markets and private exchange.
'As against state ownership is an interesting bit to use as part of the definition, because it creates the whole rest of your argument for you (by which you must say that a term like 'state capitalism' is nonsensical, but I disagree). This is fundamentally an issue of definitions, and I'm more than happy to agree to disagree on that, or even to go with your definition, and I'll use capital-prime to denote what I'm talking about.
However, according to Wikpedia (quoting Samuelson) capital is "those durable produced goods that are in turn used as productive inputs for further production" of goods and services" - so while a subclass of property, certainly not 'just property'. This also raises an empirical question, that is, in a given society what are those 'durable produced goods...' as they exist in the macroeconomic sense? Yet others view capital as a social relation. I'm saying there are multiple perspectives on the definition, but that's the nature of multiple interested parties talking about a politically, ideologically, and socially charged subject.
Ideally what we call capitalism would be consistently referred to as something like free market capitalism, or private property capitalism. I know those terms exist and are used, but very often we refer to the mainstream western system as just capitalism without qualification. So people will blame 'capitalism' for things like poverty or exploitation in the west, as though such things are completely unknown in alternative economic systems.
It is extremely relevant when you look at the outcomes.