kiwitt
Road to War Modder
This quote
China with it's 1.3 billion people seems to be doing OK in terms of bringing up it's education, development, technology, economy, etc, without any major strides in democracy. It was I believe a very poor backward country that needed education to improve it's lot and I don't think the "cultural revolution" helped.
Now one of the advantages of an "Authoritarian" regime is long planning, whereby the direction of the government does not change with each election. I know this does impact on some basic "human rights", but when the long-term development of the country needs to proceed in order to benefit the majority, something has to give. I know this does not excuse the "abuses", but democracy per se can get in the way of these long-term plans. And if we look at China and from where they began and where they are and the potential they are looking like reaching in the future, they must be doing something right overall; i.e. "The big picture" vision.
NOTE: There are plenty of examples where "Authoritarian" governments are/were going wrong, but the majority of these are/were single person/family dictatorships and not what appears to be a "group" or "party" of like-minded people like in China.
Much like what happens in schools/health/regional boards here in NZ, when democracy fails to make make progress on critical issues they are replaced by a "commission" of respected people to get it back on the right track. In running a country this type of government could be put in place, with specific mandates to achieve major developmental milestones, before "full democracy" could be put in place.
These "commission-type" governments could work in countries who have huge hurdles to overcome. (note: there is probably a better word for this.)
from this thread has touched on something I have been thinking about.Just wondering. For the common people in Africa, does democracy just slow down development? Should the Europeans and Americans do like China and just trade with them without nagging about democracy and human rights. Are we doing it the wrong way when we force Africans to adopt human rights and democracy before growth?
China with it's 1.3 billion people seems to be doing OK in terms of bringing up it's education, development, technology, economy, etc, without any major strides in democracy. It was I believe a very poor backward country that needed education to improve it's lot and I don't think the "cultural revolution" helped.
Now one of the advantages of an "Authoritarian" regime is long planning, whereby the direction of the government does not change with each election. I know this does impact on some basic "human rights", but when the long-term development of the country needs to proceed in order to benefit the majority, something has to give. I know this does not excuse the "abuses", but democracy per se can get in the way of these long-term plans. And if we look at China and from where they began and where they are and the potential they are looking like reaching in the future, they must be doing something right overall; i.e. "The big picture" vision.
NOTE: There are plenty of examples where "Authoritarian" governments are/were going wrong, but the majority of these are/were single person/family dictatorships and not what appears to be a "group" or "party" of like-minded people like in China.
Much like what happens in schools/health/regional boards here in NZ, when democracy fails to make make progress on critical issues they are replaced by a "commission" of respected people to get it back on the right track. In running a country this type of government could be put in place, with specific mandates to achieve major developmental milestones, before "full democracy" could be put in place.
These "commission-type" governments could work in countries who have huge hurdles to overcome. (note: there is probably a better word for this.)