Some thoughts while switching from CNN to MSNBC to al Jazeera to Fox News and back around...
In Hong Kong, Portugal, Turkey, Egypt and other countries, existing
governments and their ideologies are challenged by hundreds of thousands
of citizens assembling and protesting in the streets. There is often
no right to, belief in or patience for an electoral process to bring
about change. Of course, the "mobs" may be manipulated and in the minority.
They may be deceiving or destructive. They may have force of arms or
not. They may hold the will and desires of the majority of citizens or
not. Where there is protest there may be counter-protest. Where there is success, the governments either change or
adjust. Repression
or relief may follow.
On a vastly different scale Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street protesters expressed their own challenge within
our democracy. To this point, it is our assumptions that the primary
offices, the congress, the executive and the Supreme Court understand,
accept, appreciate and apply the rules of law drawn from the
Constitution for the Common Welfare. Whiskey and tea advocates aside,
we accept the primacy and legitimacy of the ballot over the street. At
least for now.
Is Egypt an example of what form "democracy" must take there (and
elsewhere) if it is to have any existence where assumptions such as ours
are not held by the people? Does the faith in or the need for the
Egyptian Army as the core of the nation compare to our faith and need
for the Constitution? The Egyptian people have found a way to express
and demand their pluralistic interests through freedom of assembly.
"Democracy" evolves or will kill itself.
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