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Political Memes @lemmy.world archomrade [he/him] @midwest.social

"You're fooling yourself, we're living in a dictatorship! A self-perpetuating autocracy in which the working classes...."

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  • But a democracy that can outright ignore (and put down by force, even) a protest demanding something that is by all accounts reasonable

    Reasonable is nothing but a point of view, man. That's the point of democracy. Democracy does not create reasonable solutions - it creates solutions that are approved of by the majority.

    If you want reasonable governance, find a philosopher-king that agrees with you. Democracy provides consensus governance, or what is as close as seems possible.

    is, what, exactly?

    A government that doesn't collapse because a large number of people gather in one place. Not much else is inherently implied by a government that doesn't concede to large-scale protests.

    • Reasonable is nothing but a point of view, man

      And what is your point of view on supporting genocide, then?

      If we all agree that supporting genocide is bad then i'd think we'd all also agree that protesting against it is.... Good?

      And it might be one of those kinds of protests that a democracy isn't supposed to ignore.

      edit: i really have to admire that you've gotten to the point where you're arguing against protesting government-supported genocide. That's an unexpected level of reactionary

      • And what is your point of view on supporting genocide, then?

        My point of view? That supporting genocide is unreasonable.

        If we all agree that supporting genocide is bad then i’d think we’d all also agree that protesting against it is… Good?

        Yep. Both from an ordinary moral standpoint ("genocide is bad") and a civic moral standpoint ("protesting is a civic duty").

        And it might be one of those kinds of protests that a democracy isn’t supposed to ignore.

        It's one of those kinds of protests that a moral government isn't supposed to ignore. Although, arguably, if there was such a thing as a moral government to begin with, protests against genocide support would not be necessary.

        But 'moral' and 'democratic' are two entirely different concepts. The purpose of a democratic government is to represent the will of the people - the consensus. The process through which that will, that consensus, is confirmed is elections, or recall petitions in some governments, not protests. Protests are merely a warning in most democratic governments, that there is some amount of groundroots support for (or against) an issue - it is not a confirmation of the opinion of the whole electorate, but that of exceptionally animated (and dutiful) citizens.

      • edit: i really have to admire that you’ve gotten to the point where you’re arguing against protesting government-supported genocide. That’s an unexpected level of reactionary

        Silly me, not realizing saying "Protests are good, but not conceding to large-scale protests does not inherently make a government non-democratic" actually meant "Protests against genocide are bad"

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