Oh. Ok, many people say he has those. How do they know? I do not see much, or rather, do not see anything special that would distinguish him from the other recent presidents (in a positive way). What have I missed?
I think in general the approval rating for government is pretty low. Not sure if it's at it's all time low, we've had some pretty rough times, but it's not in great shape.
And even the degree of his credibility has become totally irrelevant.
It's the political _system_ that needs some very serious overhaul. Now, if this is possible without _major_ pain for the People, I'm not so sure anymore...
Calling it a failure ignores the actual goals of a bureaucracy: consolidation and centralization of power.
In that regard it's been a roaring success because there has never been such a tight and unified cooperation between the three branches of government (executive, judicial, legislative), between congress and the White House, between government and private industry, between our surveillance agency and foreign surveillance agencies, and so forth.
If there's anything to glean from this entire fiasco it's that a global world order has indeed been quietly established, and the rumblings in the EU will undermine it. Expect the US' allies to start publicly picking sides as the USG starts spending political capital.
What I'm seeing is an extreme centralization with the goal of projecting extreme power on the outside, while neglecting - worse - working against the citizen on the inside.
I would have liked the headline of the article (the correct original article headline was submitted here, as preferred by the HN guidelines) better if it had referred to "the President" rather than to "Barack Obama." This is an issue for every President. If government agencies can conduct operations that are secret even from the leader of the executive branch of government, they will not have effective leadership that reflects the values of the American people. I participated in the Restore the Fourth protests in Minneapolis yesterday (which were very lightly attended--my family of two adults and two children attending probably made up 3 percent of all protesters present between 6:00pm and 7:00pm). I also attended annual fireworks in the outer-ring suburban lakeshore town where my two older children had their earliest memories. Thousands of people there and tens and thousands in nearby locations watched fireworks and celebrated Independence Day together, with the celebration I attended including the whole crowd standing for the singing of the national anthem. Americans are glad to live in a country with a government with limited powers and constitutional checks and balances. If we are assured that government agencies have to follow the law set by Congress and are accountable to the President, we will be glad to go right on celebrating our freedom each year, whoever is President.
This article assumes that NSA and other agencies are doing something nefarious without the consent and knowledge of the president.
I think it would be nice for newspapers to concentrate on what would be good for citizens as opposed to what would be good for the president and people's perception of him. He is on his last, does he really give jack shit what people thinks of him?
But you could have it set up such that in order for the wolves to eat the sheep, they must first repeal the law saying you cannot eat living animals. While the majority might be in favor of eating the sheep, they would also realize that to repeal that law would put themselves in danger, so the sheep is protected.
You wouldn't be talking about the 2-party system in place, would you?
In other words: That's what we can observe in the US. But that's not democracy.
That is: Two parties systemically killing off any 3rd party competition (even worse, actually, because in reality, the "two" parties are more or less 1 party).
Another is that since the median income in the US is lower than the mean, coupled with the fact that rich people are disproportionately represented in the public sphere, most people believe that they have more to gain than to lose through redistribution. So they "redistribute" the sheep among the wolves.
The two parties are two separate flavors of ice cream. Everyone loves ice cream, so they argue whether chocolate or vanilla is better. What they really need is an actual balanced diet, but that's not going to happen since most of the voting public is politically a 4 year old child that wants ice cream...
Most people either strongly prefer chocolate, or strongly prefer vanilla - let's say these partisans total roughly 80% of the population. Roughly 10% are resolutely 'undecided,' their vote might change each election. Suppose a final 10% strongly prefer strawberry (they are partisan too, but not with one of the two parties).
They can vote strawberry, but there is no chance of winning. Many will still do it anyway because it is a sort of symbolism or alternative to invalidating the ballot, or because they want to show that a significant number of strawberries are there in order to encourage people to vote strawberry in future elections. But many others will, in the end, vote for whichever majority flavor they would much rather see winning. If they are serious about getting more strawberry, they may do things like trying to win the vanilla primary, or positioning themselves as providing vanilla votes in exchange for a strawberry swirl.
And the two-party system continues.
Meanwhile, a tiny number of people believe we should all starve, or eat only gravel, or human flesh. While different, these are not necessarily more "balanced" suggestions. Some would like to bypass democracy to install their own like-minded buddies, which isn't very balanced either.
And the mainstream media does _all_ it can to present the competition as "not viable".
Why? Because the media is not free, it's owned by a few rich people who don't want that competition, because that competition would obviously protect their wealth much less than the 2 parties in place (which are for a good part bought via "lobbyism", which is the "nice" word for "official corruption").
Thought experiment: If you knew for sure that a majority would vote for a third party, would you do it? Yes, because you'd know that it'll work.
The problem is: Enough people see that we can't continue like that. It's just this transparency that's currently not there.
He's quoting Heinlein, who is one of the major reasons people confuse democracy with mobocracy. The idea originally came from Aristotle, who thought democracy was a bad idea: a degenerate form of a constitutional government. While it's usually claimed that Aristotle's objection was based on the silliness of having everyone decide everything, his actual objection was that democracy would allow that pernicious evil to flourish: egalitarianism.
Democracy isn't about accountability or critical publics, though I'll concede the third point about tools for discussion, which we don't have enough of, and which are of fairly pitiful quality in this day and age. (That's going to be a contentious claim, isn't it? Damn. I'll footnote my complaint as [1] then.) Accountability and critical publics are, I agree, necessary but they're nowhere near sufficient.
I do not think that it is working particularly well in any country. No country I know of has a population dedicated towards an increased participation in their own governance. At best, they ask a class of well-to-do persons to handle their governance on their behalf.
But I also think a well-done democracy is actually an ideal worth pursuing. It is not enough to imagine democracy as the least tyrannical, most tolerant state of government: it must be something positively defined to be recognized as an ambition. For that, I turn to a book published in 1916, John Dewey's Democracy and Education.
"A democracy is more than a form of government; it is primarily a mode of associated living, of conjoint communicated experience. The extension in space of the number of individuals who participate in an interest so that each has to refer his own action to that of others, and to consider the action of others to give point and direction to his own, is equivalent to the breaking down of those barriers of class, race, and national territory which kept men from perceiving the full import of their activity." [2]
To me, a well-done democracy is one in which the overwhelming majority of the population (for those who want a number, let's call it 70 to 80 percent) are actively participant in their governance. One possible way to measure active participation is the drafting of legislation. (Voting is passive participation; a head count, to paraphrase Einstein [3], requires only a spine. It does not require a large brain.) Sure, this requires free flow of information, critical thinking, and tools for discussion, but you begin to recognize that having gcc, gdb, and a decent CS education is not sufficient to write an operating system from scratch: you have to actually put code to computer. For me, such a goal necessitates a reconstructed educational system. Perhaps I am wrong about that, but if I thought that, I wouldn't be trying to come up with one. :)
But wait, there's more. It isn't sufficient to have heavy participation. It has to be maintained. Such sustained participation isn't possible if some particular subset or coalition gains an upper hand: and yet that is exactly how any kind of legislation can ever be passed. What's needed here is ways to guarantee that underdog groups always have their voices acknowledged, heard, engaged with, and accounted for. An effort should be made to keep them from losing every vote; such an effort, I expect, will inevitably lead to a fracturing of any underdog group whose interests actually non-beneficial. That's an unproven guess, but it is my expectation. You can read more about this particular issue in the place my thinking on it was inspired from, Danielle Allen's Talking to Strangers [4].
And lastly, there needs to be a kind of standard, a set of shared values that can undergird the very notion of a democracy. Why is it ideal that everyone has a voice? The core behind it is an egalitarianism: the bedrock belief that no one is intrinsically worth more than another. This egalitarianism has often been expressed as an equality of outcome (proportionate representation), or an equality of opportunity (non-discrimination), or an equality of process (everyone jumps through the same hoops). I favor Amartya Sen's equality of autonomy [5] which leads into the capabilities approach that he developed alongside Martha Nussbaum [6]. I like the capabilities approach because it avoids many of the pitfalls that previous arguments have run into: you can't stymie its analysis by moving macroscopically to statistical claims or microscopically to anecdote: its equally applicable to both cases. It's on bases like this that rule of law can be built.
It's important, I feel, to aspire towards democracy rather than resign ourselves to it. Such resignation makes room for a willingness to trade in democratic powers for short-term gratuity, such as the ever popular "liberty for security" but also things like "education for solvency" or "inclusiveness for comfort". Even if we misstep or are embattled, we do need to believe that there's a worthwhile goal to shoot for. Otherwise it's a constant battle of attrition for rights until there are none left, because we can't positively assert them on their own merits.
[1] Our communication tools have not been developed with community or collaboration in mind. This is particularly notable with Engelbart's passing, but it's always worth noting how very exceptional it is every time a decent "social" space like Github or Discourse comes out. Our tooling has focused almost exclusively on one-to-one communication, rarely even bothering to consider how three or more people could interact. This might be simple laziness, but what it really says to me is how inconsequential the notion of existing in a community is for us as a society: there's no itch to be scratched by good tools for discussion. The itch isn't there. And for those few who have it and scratch it, there appears to be no market.
[3] The original quote is, "He who joyfully marches to music in rank and file has already earned my contempt. He has been given a large brain by mistake, since for him a spinal cord would suffice."
Eh, if you read more closely, you'll notice that I pretty explicitly disagree with Heinlein and Aristotle. (And Hobbes, for that matter.)
I'll try to find the time to write a longer response today. I don't agree with any of your claims here other than the first one, and I disagree with how that one's stated.