Tharkun lies, gets banned(Split from Neocon Fall)

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tharkûn
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Post by tharkûn »

He raises a good point that whilst supporters of the war are generally enormously critical of modest attempts at social engineering domestically they seemed supremely confident that the US could create civil society in Iraq at the barrel of a gun in practically the blink of an eye, it’s quite frankly hard to conceive of a more deliriously ambitious form of social engineering.
The model wasn't that the US would go in and set up Iraq. It was that the Iraqis would follow the path of the Kurds and the Shi'ites from GWI and almost spontaneously give rise to a popular movement for democracy. Essentially the plan overly relied upon the conservative faith in the individual, that the people of Iraq would have such a strong desire for freedom and modern democracy that the dissidents would be swamped by the local populace who would be thrilled to be freed.

Long term I think the neocons are correct, societies will eventually empower their citizenry who will then drive the government to democratic moderation. The problem, in my opinion, is one of mechanics and methodology. Instituting democacy at the point of a gun can occur, as seen in the FRG, Japan, Panama, etc.; and may still occur in Iraq - but to do so reliably would require a far finer touch or far greater commitment than has been shown thus far.
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Post by Gil Hamilton »

tharkûn wrote:Long term I think the neocons are correct, societies will eventually empower their citizenry who will then drive the government to democratic moderation. The problem, in my opinion, is one of mechanics and methodology. Instituting democacy at the point of a gun can occur, as seen in the FRG, Japan, Panama, etc.; and may still occur in Iraq - but to do so reliably would require a far finer touch or far greater commitment than has been shown thus far.
I'm not sure that democracy at gun point is possible. Our own form of democracy and other democratic Western countries were all born of gradual and painful processes. I mean, (as Kurt Vonnegut pointed out recently) here in the United States it took us 85 years after Thomas Jefferson wrote that "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" were inalienable rights for us to let our slaves go and nearly 150 years before we let our women take part in the political process. It's not an easy process to make a real functioning process of democracy.

With Germany, the idea of democracy had already existed. In fact, National Socialism arose from a form of democratic process. Then with Germany's destruction, the German people - at least in the west - couldn't afford not to rebuild in that way. Even so, half of Germany still became Communist by the same process that created West Germany.

With Japan, there was literally nothing left. A grand total of one of their major cities remained undestroyed (Kyoto) by strategic bombing, and that's because we purposely left it alone. Then their Emperor surrendered unconditionally, and he was supposed to be a god.

With Panana, it wasn't like Roosevelt made the Panamian revolution from Colombia, the movement already existed; Roosevelt just gave it American support. And he didn't even give a crap about Panamian independence or democracy there, the Colombian government was refusing to sell the land to the United States to build the canal at a price that Roosevelt was willing to pay. It should be noted that Panama is still kind of hole, unlike Germany or Japan.

All of which had specific circumstances that allowed them to exist. However, it's a mistake to think that such things can happen everywhere. The neoconservative sentiment that our President expouses, that everyone wants to be free and have democracy (even if they don't know it yet) simply doesn't appear to be true. We could foster actual popular movements in a country like in Panama or utterly and irrevocably bomb a country until they have nothing left like Germany or Japan, but you can't make democracy out of nothing and you certainly cannot foist it on a people in a half-measure sort of way.
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Post by tharkûn »

One could probably call this social engineering as well, albeit a shoddy form of it. "Social intelligent design", perhaps - a name more appropriate for the naive assumption that a democratic civil society will rise, deus ex machina, from a group of people with no tradition of democracy or the kind of secular philosophy that inspired it in the modern world, in a region where competing sects and ethnicities are penned in by an arbitrary border, provided that the United States establishes a basic initial condition.
Engineering implies far more planning and active control than what it appears the neocons had in mind. Do recall though secularity, ethnic homogeneity, or homogenous religious makeup are not prerequisites of democracy. Indeed the crucible in which modern democracy was born happened with divides over religion, ethnic status, and was officially religious.
Using either Plekhanov's or your own description, the expectation that existing conditions could still be changed by American action, and a democratic civil society established where there once was none, remains. Whether that is social engineering proper or social engineering "lite" does not change the fact that it is engineering nonetheless.
Under this definition any government policy would be an attempt at social egineering, thus rendering the term to be merely redudant. There was very little planning about how to effect the transformation, indeed in many ways the lack of social engineering and structuring is one of the defining characteristics of early post-invasion Iraq.
The problem with the neocon thesis is that things do not happen automatically, nor are societies monolithic blocs capable of action. Societies are shifting seas of individuals, and it is the individual from which oppression stems - as well as who pays the cost in time, sweat, and blood to remove that oppression and purchase liberty. To make a whole society do something requires the subtle manipulation of its constitutent members, and it is that subtlety that was wholly lacking in Iraq. Change was not impossible there - but it was a task well beyond those who undertook it.
I highly doubt it takes all that much "subtle manipulation" to get people to agree to material betterment or that they at least should be able to follow the dictates of their conscious.

The problem from my perspective on history comes in assuring people that democracy will result in material betterment (the rejection of this feeds an acceptance of autocracy, totalitarianism, and dictatorship) and that their positions (moral, religious, nationalistic, etc.) will not be trampled upon. Reading through the period apologists for autocrats, fascists, communists, etc. against democracy seems to center around the perceived danger to material property and the danger of sweeping change.
I'm not sure that democracy at gun point is possible. Our own form of democracy and other democratic Western countries were all born of gradual and painful processes. I mean, (as Kurt Vonnegut pointed out recently) here in the United States it took us 85 years after Thomas Jefferson wrote that "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" were inalienable rights for us to let our slaves go and nearly 150 years before we let our women take part in the political process. It's not an easy process to make a real functioning process of democracy.
I'm not sure that democracy at gun point is possible. Our own form of democracy and other democratic Western countries were all born of gradual and painful processes. I mean, (as Kurt Vonnegut pointed out recently) here in the United States it took us 85 years after Thomas Jefferson wrote that "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" were inalienable rights for us to let our slaves go and nearly 150 years before we let our women take part in the political process. It's not an easy process to make a real functioning process of democracy.
We have historical case examples, for instance Bolivar landed in Venzuela with Haitian troops. Likewise we have recorded accounts of the Athenians democratizing oligocratic city-states as a matter of policy.
With Germany, the idea of democracy had already existed. In fact, National Socialism arose from a form of democratic process. Then with Germany's destruction, the German people - at least in the west - couldn't afford not to rebuild in that way. Even so, half of Germany still became Communist by the same process that created West Germany.
The idea of democracy already existed in Iraq as well. Do recall that Iraq was a republic from 1958-1963.
With Panana, it wasn't like Roosevelt made the Panamian revolution from Colombia, the movement already existed; Roosevelt just gave it American support. And he didn't even give a crap about Panamian independence or democracy there, the Colombian government was refusing to sell the land to the United States to build the canal at a price that Roosevelt was willing to pay. It should be noted that Panama is still kind of hole, unlike Germany or Japan.
In Iraq the Kurds already had what amounted to a virtual state, the Shi'ites had already demonstrated a liberation movement, which GHWB simply allowed to be killed wholesale.
All of which had specific circumstances that allowed them to exist. However, it's a mistake to think that such things can happen everywhere. The neoconservative sentiment that our President expouses, that everyone wants to be free and have democracy (even if they don't know it yet) simply doesn't appear to be true. We could foster actual popular movements in a country like in Panama or utterly and irrevocably bomb a country until they have nothing left like Germany or Japan, but you can't make democracy out of nothing and you certainly cannot foist it on a people in a half-measure sort of way.
What of Athens then? Athenian foreign policy regularly called for the overthrow of kings and the privileged few in order to empower the masses. This had the effect of more strongly tying these city-states to Athenian interests and was moderately effective, outlasting Athenian democracy itself.

And this wasn’t an attempt at social engineering on a monumental scale why exactly?
Engineering:
1. The application of scientific and mathematical principles to practical ends such as the design, manufacture, and operation of efficient and economical structures, machines, processes, and systems.
2. Skillful maneuvering or direction.

Now if you can show me the scientific and mathematic basis for this being "social engineering" I will happily conceed. However I know of no such basis, rather neocon policy rests upon historical and ideological basis.

As far as the second definition, I would think you'd be the last to call the policy skillful and would argee that after the invasion American policy was rather directionless.
So it was poorly conceived, terribly executed and hopelessly optimistic (very common right wing criticisms of domestic social engineering programs incidentally). The astonishing incompetence and ideological blindness behind the ‘plan’ to democratise Iraq do not stop it being an attempt at social engineering, it’s just a really, really bad one.
:roll: So are all government policies, particularly foreign policy attempts at social engineering? The basis for the neocon plan has none of the alleged mathematical or scientific backings of actually defined and demonstrated social engineering attempts. Without even a pseudo-scientific basis this simply cannot have been an exercise in social engineering.
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Post by Gil Hamilton »

tharkûn wrote:We have historical case examples, for instance Bolivar landed in Venzuela with Haitian troops. Likewise we have recorded accounts of the Athenians democratizing oligocratic city-states as a matter of policy.
That also ended up with Athens getting sacked by Sparta, a fourth of their population dying from plague as the war dragged on and on, and a massacre of democrats by the people like Critias.

Furthermore, do you know what happened when Athens "liberated" the population of another city-state? It usually involved robbing them blind to pay for the war and a massacre of the "disposed party". They actually used to go around after the Persians were ejected from Greece going to neighboring city-states announcing "We've got two powerful gods on our side; persuasion and compulsion!" In other words, give us money or we'll bleed you for it.

Do we really want to emulate the Athenian Empire?
The idea of democracy already existed in Iraq as well. Do recall that Iraq was a republic from 1958-1963.
Which faction today is directly pro-democratic in a way that isn't a virtual tyranny for some other faction?
What of Athens then? Athenian foreign policy regularly called for the overthrow of kings and the privileged few in order to empower the masses. This had the effect of more strongly tying these city-states to Athenian interests and was moderately effective, outlasting Athenian democracy itself.
As said above, you failed to mention the end of the Athenian democracy involved being smashed by Sparta after over a decade of war, having a fourth of their population die as a result due to Spartan seige, and a massacre of democrats or anyone suspected of being a democrat.

Or that the "overthrow of kings" was routinely an excuse to invade and loot the living hell out of the city-state they "liberated", not to mention taking slaves. Though I suppose under the Athenian definition, thats war loot too.

It also meant that Athens was constantly at war, even before the Spartan war that was such a disaster for Athens. Practically every city-state around Athens was on poor terms with them and for good reason, since Athens robbed most of them.

But hey, if you want to emulate Athens foriegn policy and constantly be at war to support your Empire. However, just remember how the story ended, hmm?
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Post by tharkûn »

That also ended up with Athens getting sacked by Sparta, a fourth of their population dying from plague as the war dragged on and on, and a massacre of democrats by the people like Critias.
:roll: The point is not that the US should fully emulate the foreign policy of Athens, merely that historical examples of democracy instituted through threat of violence has historical precedent.

Further I have no idea why you insist on bringing up a red herring like the plague. This was ancient Greece, the plague would come irregardless of their foreign policy.
Furthermore, do you know what happened when Athens "liberated" the population of another city-state? It usually involved robbing them blind to pay for the war and a massacre of the "disposed party". They actually used to go around after the Persians were ejected from Greece going to neighboring city-states announcing "We've got two powerful gods on our side; persuasion and compulsion!" In other words, give us money or we'll bleed you for it.
Yes I do know Athenian wars of liberation followed standard period practice and were possibly more mercenary. That frankly is irrelevant. The reasons why they had to loot do not exist in the present day, the US military cannot be sustained on pillage. Again you are taking a simple point, namely that historical precedent exists for instituting democracy through violence. Your narrow focus on Athenians after it quit being a Democracy and lost to Sparta is beyond me, according to history they instituted democratic rule in numerous city states that endured for generations.
Do we really want to emulate the Athenian Empire?
Do we really have to resort to this ludicrious strawman? I have said there is historical precedence for introducing democracy through force of arms, would you prefer I cite Republican France, Italian unification, or Czechoslovakia? Yes it is rare, yes it is difficult, but exactly how many disperate sets of "special circumstances" will you come up with? How many times will you have ignore generations worth of history merely to look at what happens after a devasting act of nature?

Oh Japan doesn't count because it was a religious thing. The FRG doesn't count, they had the Weimar Republic doesn't count.
Which faction today is directly pro-democratic in a way that isn't a virtual tyranny for some other faction?
The Kurds, at worst they are seperatists. With broader support and broader goals would be Allawi's faction. Even among the Shi'ite bloc there are fractures with some support for democracy. Currently I give Iraq a 50:50 shot maybe a 67:33 shot at becoming a viable, moderately stable democracy.

As said above, you failed to mention the end of the Athenian democracy involved being smashed by Sparta after over a decade of war, having a fourth of their population die as a result due to Spartan seige, and a massacre of democrats or anyone suspected of being a democrat.
Maybe because that was literally generations after Athenian policy began, perhaps? Maybe that would be because the war was about FAR more than democratizing the Hellenic world. Maybe because there was a friggen massive truce in the midst of the war which Athens could have used to build a lasting peace, etc.
Or that the "overthrow of kings" was routinely an excuse to invade and loot the living hell out of the city-state they "liberated", not to mention taking slaves. Though I suppose under the Athenian definition, thats war loot too.
Which was not significantly different than occurred in other wars. If anything this point leans my way in that Athens produced democracies that were viable for generation in SPITE of having the hell pillaged out of them.
It also meant that Athens was constantly at war, even before the Spartan war that was such a disaster for Athens. Practically every city-state around Athens was on poor terms with them and for good reason, since Athens robbed most of them.
Constantly, that seems like a rather bold claim, would you care to substantiate that more than say 4 major campaigns every 10 years occurred?

Further every city-state was not on poor terms, Argos joined sides with Athens in the middle of the war. Chios was on extremely good terms, and let us not forget that the run up to war included a state BEGGING to come under Athenian rule.
But hey, if you want to emulate Athens foriegn policy and constantly be at war to support your Empire. However, just remember how the story ended, hmm?
Yes let's. Athens abandons their own democracy in attempt to win Persian support, attempts to change the governments' of its allies, and armies revolt leading to major Athenian problems. Eventually they are besieged in Athens and eventually brought low by a plague. Let us do recall that it was only after Athens stopped instituting democracy through violence that she fell :roll:
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Post by Simplicius »

tharkûn wrote:Engineering implies far more planning and active control than what it appears the neocons had in mind.
Hence my suggestion that as social engineering goes, Iraq represents the shoddiest possible work.
tharkûn wrote:Do recall though secularity, ethnic homogeneity, or homogenous religious makeup are not prerequisites of democracy. Indeed the crucible in which modern democracy was born happened with divides over religion, ethnic status, and was officially religious.
No, those things are not prerequisites of democracy. But, you'll note that in countries where democracy exists, the structure of government was carefully planned to make sure that the system would prevail despite any divisions in the population. That kind of careful planning, as far as I am concerned, consitutes social enginnering. If Iraq's government is arranged to provide stability in the face of ethnic and sectarian divisions, it is engineered. If it is not, then the likelihood is that any liberal democratic state will be undermined by conflict before it has time to establish itself.
tharkûn wrote:Under this definition any government policy would be an attempt at social egineering, thus rendering the term to be merely redudant. There was very little planning about how to effect the transformation, indeed in many ways the lack of social engineering and structuring is one of the defining characteristics of early post-invasion Iraq.
As I was taught, part of the philosophy of conservativism as it is traditionally known is that society is an organic thing, which is too complex to alter by active policy. That justifies a government that avoids interfering in social affairs except to ensure the liberties of the individual. That state of being, where social change occurs, if at all, by the sum of small individual actions, is one in which no social engineering exists.

To me, social engineering is the attempt to remedy a perceived problem with society directly, rather than waiting to see if it irons itself out. If Iraq was to be a situation devoid of social engieering, the approach on the part of the US would have had to have been "Let's sit back and wait; Hussein won't reign forever and hopefully something good will rise once he's gone." Instead, the US decided that it needed to help to process along by ousting him, and then remain to assist in creating a new government - and a particular form, at that - afterward. In other words, the US saw a problem with a society, and took direct action to try and remedy it. It may not have been social engineering to the hilt - I don't contest the expectation that the Iraqis would tend toward a democratic society on their own - but it is a small amount of engineering nonetheless.
tharkûn wrote:I highly doubt it takes all that much "subtle manipulation" to get people to agree to material betterment or that they at least should be able to follow the dictates of their conscious.
My point, perhaps poorly stated, was that societies cannot do anything - only individuals can. To convince an entire society to act in a certain way, one must convince every member of that society to do so.

Human history is not the result of mass societies changing in response to sweeping, impersonal forces, as determinist historians like Fukuyama suggest. Rather, is is the sum of individual descisions in response to situations created by other individual decisions. Human societies will therefore only "tend toward" liberal democracy as long as people the world over continually decide that liberal democracy is what they want, and then decide to get up and do something about it. Without that individual action, Fukuyama's progress won't happen.
tharkûn wrote:The problem from my perspective on history comes in assuring people that democracy will result in material betterment (the rejection of this feeds an acceptance of autocracy, totalitarianism, and dictatorship) and that their positions (moral, religious, nationalistic, etc.) will not be trampled upon. Reading through the period apologists for autocrats, fascists, communists, etc. against democracy seems to center around the perceived danger to material property and the danger of sweeping change.
Which invalidates Fukuyama and anyone who rests their ideas on a pro-liberal democracy deterministic view of history - if people need to be convinced that democracy will benefit them and assured that chaos and instability won't ruin the lives they already have - IOW, as long as a choice exists - then there can be no "natural progression" toward liberal democracy.

People are now much as they have been - they will take what they can get and hold on to it as long as they can, and if it looks like they can get something better without unacceptable risk, they'll go for it. But that decision will always be the first step; if liberal democracy ever becomes the default setting for all of humanity, it will only be because it's the form of government they wake up with in the morning. I doubt people will stop asking "What else is there?" which will provide motivation for attempts at change, for those who want more at the expense of others to make power grabs, for those who feel that they are being shortchanged to get a fairer piece of the pie, for people to constantly decide and interact - and human history will continue as always.
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Post by Gil Hamilton »

tharkûn wrote: :roll: The point is not that the US should fully emulate the foreign policy of Athens, merely that historical examples of democracy instituted through threat of violence has historical precedent.
A historical precident which ended up as a complete disaster for the people who were conducting it.
Further I have no idea why you insist on bringing up a red herring like the plague. This was ancient Greece, the plague would come irregardless of their foreign policy.
Not the plague that destroyed a fourth of the Athenian population. That was brought on because of the Athenians evacuating the Attic countryside because they couldn't possibly defend the population against the Spartan army with much of it outside the city. So they brought the population within the city walls and as the war dragged on and on and on, population density and poor sanitation savaged the population.

The decision to bring the Athenian population to such density was a direct result of the war with Sparta, which had alot of do with their foriegn policy.
Yes I do know Athenian wars of liberation followed standard period practice and were possibly more mercenary. That frankly is irrelevant. The reasons why they had to loot do not exist in the present day, the US military cannot be sustained on pillage. Again you are taking a simple point, namely that historical precedent exists for instituting democracy through violence. Your narrow focus on Athenians after it quit being a Democracy and lost to Sparta is beyond me, according to history they instituted democratic rule in numerous city states that endured for generations.
It was still sort of a democracy that Pericles was part of when the war with Sparta started and the massacres in Athens that followed were of their democrats and suspected democrats.

We could look at other points in history. The Athenians did help fight in the Ionic colonies to establish democracy in Persia. This lead to Darius, who never heard of the Athenians by that point, to swear revenge upon them. However, you'll not that those Ionic colonies were swiftly recaptured by the Persian armies and it was only on the mercy of the Persians that they were allowed to keep their democracies, so long as they paid their taxes. In much the same way the Persians sent the Jews home from Babylon and let them practice their own religion.

You'll notice that the Athenians fighting in the Ionic colonies to help set up their democracies ended up with the ire of the Persian empire coming down on them with Xerxes fulfilling his fathers quest for revenge (note, the Persians were successful in sacking Athens) and only blind luck prevented the Persians from conquering Greece.

As a historical precident, it's demostrates that you need rediculously good luck to survive implimenting democracy by the threat of force or by force. It very nearly ended up with Athens being another Persian territory.
Do we really have to resort to this ludicrious strawman? I have said there is historical precedence for introducing democracy through force of arms, would you prefer I cite Republican France, Italian unification, or Czechoslovakia? Yes it is rare, yes it is difficult, but exactly how many disperate sets of "special circumstances" will you come up with? How many times will you have ignore generations worth of history merely to look at what happens after a devasting act of nature?

Oh Japan doesn't count because it was a religious thing. The FRG doesn't count, they had the Weimar Republic doesn't count.
As a matter of fact, it was a religious thing in Japan and the fact they have nothing else, do to strategic bombing. And Germany did have a prior history of democracy, which in fact lead to National Socialism. Hell, you are ignoring the fact that half of Germany went communist at the end of the war, not exactly a stellar example of a triumph of democracy by force.

The fact is that because it's rare and difficult, not every country and situation is democracy through force even applicable in the same way that you can't fix every problem with a hammer. However, neocons don't see it that way. You heard President Bush EVERYONE wants to be free and EVERYONE wants democracy and we should spread it by hook or by crook.
The Kurds, at worst they are seperatists. With broader support and broader goals would be Allawi's faction. Even among the Shi'ite bloc there are fractures with some support for democracy. Currently I give Iraq a 50:50 shot maybe a 67:33 shot at becoming a viable, moderately stable democracy.
Does that Shi'ite bloc that supports democracy want it for Sunnis?

Maybe because that was literally generations after Athenian policy began, perhaps? Maybe that would be because the war was about FAR more than democratizing the Hellenic world. Maybe because there was a friggen massive truce in the midst of the war which Athens could have used to build a lasting peace, etc.
Then take their democratization of the Ionic colonies from under the nose of Darius, if you want.
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tharkûn wrote:I have said there is historical precedence for introducing democracy through force of arms, would you prefer I cite Republican France, Italian unification, or Czechoslovakia? Yes it is rare, yes it is difficult, but exactly how many disperate sets of "special circumstances" will you come up with? How many times will you have ignore generations worth of history merely to look at what happens after a devasting act of nature?
And you are dead wrong: Republican France collapsed into revolutionary terror, then a military dictatorship, then an imperial upstart, then reintroduced its former monarchy. Democracy in France didn't really take off until after Napoleon III was deposed and the Third Republic rose in his place.

As for the Italian unification, that had more to do with nationalism than democracy per-se and was not a case of external force imposing a new political order upon the Italian city-states. Furthermore, we're talking about a process which occurred over the course of 70 years, or 90 depending upon your view of its beginning-point.

As for Czechoslovakia, trying to cite an event arising from the dissolution of an old, sick empire, even one hastened by a losing war, hardly provides an example worth counting. Particularly as none of the Austro-Hungarian territories ended up under military occupation after the Great War. Furthermore, there had been a budding parlimentary system in the empire before the war, to which Czech and Slovak representatives had been elected. So democracy was not an unknown or unfamiliar concept to those people.

Sorry, but you're not doing very well trying to manufacture the supposed precedents for imposing democracy at gunpoint.
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Post by tharkûn »

Which invalidates Fukuyama and anyone who rests their ideas on a pro-liberal democracy deterministic view of history - if people need to be convinced that democracy will benefit them and assured that chaos and instability won't ruin the lives they already have - IOW, as long as a choice exists - then there can be no "natural progression" toward liberal democracy.
Human history is not the result of mass societies changing in response to sweeping, impersonal forces, as determinist historians like Fukuyama suggest. Rather, is is the sum of individual descisions in response to situations created by other individual decisions. Human societies will therefore only "tend toward" liberal democracy as long as people the world over continually decide that liberal democracy is what they want, and then decide to get up and do something about it. Without that individual action, Fukuyama's progress won't happen.
A historical precident which ended up as a complete disaster for the people who were conducting it.
Hardly. History doesn't end in 404. The following year the Spartan backed "thirty tyrants" were deposed and democracy restored. A second league was formed in 378 which lead to the defeat of Sparta and Thebes in 371. Of course history didn't end there, Athens decided not to back democracy with force of arms, the second league fell away, and that lead to the wholesale conquest of the Hellenic world by Phillip and Alexander.
Not the plague that destroyed a fourth of the Athenian population. That was brought on because of the Athenians evacuating the Attic countryside because they couldn't possibly defend the population against the Spartan army with much of it outside the city. So they brought the population within the city walls and as the war dragged on and on and on, population density and poor sanitation savaged the population.
Which came about because Megara was not forced into a democratic position to gaurd the Attic flank as she had done so in previous history. Leaving Megara to the oligocrats would seem to be a more direct cause than the inevitable clash of the two major power blocs of the Hellenic world.
It was still sort of a democracy that Pericles was part of when the war with Sparta started and the massacres in Athens that followed were of their democrats and suspected democrats.
Concession accepted the defeats you attributed to forcible democracy happened under a psuedo-democracy. Even at that it took the combined might of Persia and Sparta to do so.
We could look at other points in history. The Athenians did help fight in the Ionic colonies to establish democracy in Persia. This lead to Darius, who never heard of the Athenians by that point, to swear revenge upon them. However, you'll not that those Ionic colonies were swiftly recaptured by the Persian armies and it was only on the mercy of the Persians that they were allowed to keep their democracies, so long as they paid their taxes. In much the same way the Persians sent the Jews home from Babylon and let them practice their own religion.
:roll: By 395 Persia was funding Athens against Sparta. Persia was strictly an oppurtunistic player of the Great Game and it was only after Athens let the second league crumble that Persian and eventually Macedonian hegemony ruled.
As a historical precident, it's demostrates that you need rediculously good luck to survive implimenting democracy by the threat of force or by force. It very nearly ended up with Athens being another Persian territory.
It also very nearly ended up with Persia reliquishing the majority of its holdings on the western sea. Which is bloody remarkable considering how heavily the odds were stacked against Athens.
As a matter of fact, it was a religious thing in Japan and the fact they have nothing else, do to strategic bombing. And Germany did have a prior history of democracy, which in fact lead to National Socialism. Hell, you are ignoring the fact that half of Germany went communist at the end of the war, not exactly a stellar example of a triumph of democracy by force.
Matter of fact Japan could easily have amended their constitution at any point in the last few decades, it isn't going to happen. You wish to tell me that actions taken by Athens generations before her defeat are proof that one cannot establish democracy by force, even noting that Athens when she was reduced in 404 was ruined by far more than Japan ever was. You can't have it both ways.

As far as the DRG, that was strictly due the Red Army having the boots on the ground which in turn was due to political decisions made during WWII; at a point when the big three were carving up European spheres of influence without regard for democracy.
The fact is that because it's rare and difficult, not every country and situation is democracy through force even applicable in the same way that you can't fix every problem with a hammer. However, neocons don't see it that way. You heard President Bush EVERYONE wants to be free and EVERYONE wants democracy and we should spread it by hook or by crook.
Ignoring the trouble with blanket universal claims, that is largely correct. Most people want to be free or at last enjoy the fruits that modern freedom brings. Democracy through force is not always an applicable option, true, but sometimes it is. In reality Iraq was not a terrible candidate; it had a popular uprising in the south, it had a quasi state in north run along democratic lines, and there was rampant repression by the Ba'athist regime. That is far more than many successful installations of democracy have had.
Does that Shi'ite bloc that supports democracy want it for Sunnis?
Yes. Look this is a friggen parliamentary democracy. The major parties as reported in the western media are actually umbrella groups which have their own factions. This has lead to all manner of strange political beddings, and at times is quite ugly. However the Shi'ites did open negotiations for forming the new government with both Sunni Kurds and Arabs.
Then take their democratization of the Ionic colonies from under the nose of Darius, if you want.
Was largely an issue of the Greeks not having a good notion of geography and demography, much as was the invasion of Sicily. Again the point is that Athens broke democracy by force, and those democracies outlasted many modern ones. From Europe to Latin America to Africa, precious few democratic states have had as long a run of democratic tradition as those brought into democracy by Athenian force.

Simplicius:
Hence my suggestion that as social engineering goes, Iraq represents the shoddiest possible work.
And hence you suggestion is fallicious. Without planning, active control, etc. it isn't social engineering. Government may take actions without the specific goal of engineering society.
No, those things are not prerequisites of democracy. But, you'll note that in countries where democracy exists, the structure of government was carefully planned to make sure that the system would prevail despite any divisions in the population.
BWhahahahaha.

That was a good one. In the United Kingdom, argueably the most longevitious democracy in the world there was no planning of the state, rather a series of parliamentary acts, not to mention wars and rebellions lead to an ad hoc organization of the government. One which continues to see significant changes, in many cases being completely beyond the intents of the initial enactors (i.e. the sequential enfrachisements). Likewise one can look to Israel where there is no wealth of traditional custom, no written constitution, and a good deal of stuff made up on the fly (which does lead to its own problems, such as the lack of secular marriage). Need I really continue? Yes some democratic nations sit down and hold constitutional conventions and deliberate extensively to perfect their preferred form of democracy, however numerous groups having not done so remain staunchly democratic to this day; others who argued over prepositional phrasing in their consitutions have gone through multiple lapses and several distinct documents.
That kind of careful planning, as far as I am concerned, consitutes social enginnering. If Iraq's government is arranged to provide stability in the face of ethnic and sectarian divisions, it is engineered. If it is not, then the likelihood is that any liberal democratic state will be undermined by conflict before it has time to establish itself.
Iraq's government contains little formal protection to preclude ethnic and sectarian divisions. These may be prevent by the fractured state of the electorate and the balance of power (both political and military); there are not extensive protections in the Iraqi constitution.
As I was taught, part of the philosophy of conservativism as it is traditionally known is that society is an organic thing, which is too complex to alter by active policy. That justifies a government that avoids interfering in social affairs except to ensure the liberties of the individual. That state of being, where social change occurs, if at all, by the sum of small individual actions, is one in which no social engineering exists.
And whomever taught you was a moron. Conservatism follows three broad philosophies. What you describe is quite Burkean, actually going farther than Burke who merely said attempts to change society by active policy should be minimal and slow to implement. The traditions of Hooker and even more modern conservatives is not nearly so sweeping. Neoconservatism, in general seems to follow the Hooker tradition rather than the Burkean.
To me, social engineering is the attempt to remedy a perceived problem with society directly, rather than waiting to see if it irons itself out. If Iraq was to be a situation devoid of social engieering, the approach on the part of the US would have had to have been "Let's sit back and wait; Hussein won't reign forever and hopefully something good will rise once he's gone." Instead, the US decided that it needed to help to process along by ousting him, and then remain to assist in creating a new government - and a particular form, at that - afterward. In other words, the US saw a problem with a society, and took direct action to try and remedy it. It may not have been social engineering to the hilt - I don't contest the expectation that the Iraqis would tend toward a democratic society on their own - but it is a small amount of engineering nonetheless.
Wonderful you uniformed opinion and thirty five cents can let me make a phone call. According your analogy hiring police officers would be social engineering, rather than waiting for the citizenry to make their own course of action.

Frankly not all action taken is engineering. I can build a bridge without engineering it, egineering is a specific procedure; not every policy action taken follows it.
My point, perhaps poorly stated, was that societies cannot do anything - only individuals can. To convince an entire society to act in a certain way, one must convince every member of that society to do so.
Which is essentially fallicious. One can compel members of society as well as expel them.
Human history is not the result of mass societies changing in response to sweeping, impersonal forces, as determinist historians like Fukuyama suggest. Rather, is is the sum of individual descisions in response to situations created by other individual decisions. Human societies will therefore only "tend toward" liberal democracy as long as people the world over continually decide that liberal democracy is what they want, and then decide to get up and do something about it. Without that individual action, Fukuyama's progress won't happen.
Actually I would bet that Fukuyama agrees that action must grow up from below to some degree. However it is fallicious to say that merely because behaviour occurs individually that broad sweeping forces cannot exist. Like systems of particles in chemistry, the behavious of individual molecules can be choatic and turbulent; yet the substance as a whole will act uniformly in accordance to known laws.

In other words the choatic nature of human behaviour averages out in some cases and that average responds to some broad sweeping forces.
Which invalidates Fukuyama and anyone who rests their ideas on a pro-liberal democracy deterministic view of history - if people need to be convinced that democracy will benefit them and assured that chaos and instability won't ruin the lives they already have - IOW, as long as a choice exists - then there can be no "natural progression" toward liberal democracy.
Please. Problems between perception and reality can easily see progress. in the 18th century it was a far easier sell that democracy was inferior at protecting life, dignity, and property. As time has gone on the superior average performance of democracy becomes continiously harder to deny. The more non-democratic regimes that go tits up lend credence to reality and change perceptions. To whit there is a time lag between reality and perception. Eventually the two will converge, but at present delays can occur which can even be reduced by active intervention.
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Post by Darth Wong »

Communist apologist: "Communism is a great idea, but it was never implemented properly."

Neo-conservative apologist: "Neo-conservatism is a great idea, but it was never implemented properly."
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Post by tharkûn »

Communist apologist: "Communism is a great idea, but it was never implemented properly."

Neo-conservative apologist: "Neo-conservatism is a great idea, but it was never implemented properly."
Why yes a movement with multiplicative failures that has created some of the worst hellholes on earth is completely comparable to one which has been instantiated exactly once; and not even completely at that :roll:

Good to know you beleive in drawing broad sweeping conclusions that allow you to poison the well from exactly one data point.
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Post by Patrick Degan »

tharkûn wrote:
Communist apologist: "Communism is a great idea, but it was never implemented properly."

Neo-conservative apologist: "Neo-conservatism is a great idea, but it was never implemented properly."
Why yes a movement with multiplicative failures that has created some of the worst hellholes on earth is completely comparable to one which has been instantiated exactly once; and not even completely at that :roll:

Good to know you beleive in drawing broad sweeping conclusions that allow you to poison the well from exactly one data point.
Strawman Fallacy, and a rather unimaginative one at that.
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Post by Darth Wong »

tharkûn wrote:
Communist apologist: "Communism is a great idea, but it was never implemented properly."

Neo-conservative apologist: "Neo-conservatism is a great idea, but it was never implemented properly."
Why yes a movement with multiplicative failures that has created some of the worst hellholes on earth is completely comparable to one which has been instantiated exactly once; and not even completely at that :roll:
I've had enough of your strawman bullshit, fucktard. I never said that neo-conservatism was identical to communism in every way, so you can take your usual Bush cocksucking bullshit and shove it up your well-greased ass. All I said is that they use the same excuses for failures.
Good to know you beleive in drawing broad sweeping conclusions that allow you to poison the well from exactly one data point.
I expect that your next post in this thread will be you promising to stop misrepresenting people who say things that make you uncomfortable, otherwise I will ensure that your posts per day drops precipitously in the very near future. I am rapidly running out of patience with your propensity for distorting peoples' positions.
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Post by tharkûn »

I see Mike, so you basicly had no point other than to poison the well and were making any comparisons of substance at all?

Is there some particular point you disagree about that you'd like to make a substantiative arguement over? I do love how when I say Bush cocked up the implementation of policy it somehow becomes "Bush cocksucking" - further giving him 50/50 odds of pulling off a viable democratic Iraq in the long run is lso abvious "cock sucking". Is anything but your brand of rabid anti-Bushism cocksucking? Should I have used smaller words when saying that Bush lacks the skill to pull off neoconservative policy so you could understand it?









//note for the dense, look up the word hyperbole
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Post by AdmiralKanos »

Wrong answer, asshole. I only pointed out that neo-conservatives are using the same bullshit excuses that communists do. The logic is identical: despite a clear failure of policy, they pretend that it would have worked if it was just done right. The number and magnitude of the failures are irrelevant.

Your various attempts to misrepresent my point as either an equation of neo-conservatism to communism or an attempt to "poison the well" are par for the course for you: an ideologue asshole whose modus operandi has always been to subtly misrepresent points and positions in an attempt to change the direction of an argument to one that is more to your liking.

All of this I have generally tolerated in the past, and for a very long time, despite our massive political differences. However, when you misrepresent someone's position and get caught in the act, you are supposed to back off. If you have decided to amp up the trollishness instead, despite a clear warning not to do so, I have a simple remedy of my own:

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Goodbye, asshole.

Oh yes, and:
Should I have used smaller words when saying that Bush lacks the skill to pull off neoconservative policy so you could understand it?
In case you're too fucking stupid to realize it, you are actually saying exactly what I said you would say.
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Post by SirNitram »

Moved to Parting Shots from it's mother thread.

Ta-ta, Tharky.
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