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Friday, January 04, 2008
Charles Krauthammer :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Necessity of Democratic Survival in Pakistan
by Charles Krauthammer
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"My mother always said, democracy is the best revenge."
-- Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, son of the late Benazir Bhutto

WASHINGTON -- Of all the understandings of the democratic idea, none could be more wrong than this one. Democracy at its very core is an antidote to the kind of dynastic revenge young Bhutto was suggesting.

For the Bhuttos, elections are a means for the family to regain power. Benazir was always avenging the death of her father, the former prime minister hanged two years after a coup. Bilawal is now pledged to do the same for his mother's martyrdom. The Pakistan People's Party has always been a wholly owned family subsidiary. Hence the almost unseemly haste with which Bhutto's husband and son were given immediate control upon Benazir's death.

Democracy was meant to be the antithesis of feudalism. Popular sovereignty was to supplant divine right; free elections to supplant dynastic succession (a progression Americans have not completely mastered either). It is clear that Bilawal meant to put the best gloss on his mother's dictum. He, like she, would avenge the political murder of a parent not with violence but through the ballot box. Nonetheless, his unmistakable assumption of aristocratic entitlement clangs against his professed fealty to democratic means.

His mother was the same. In more than one journalistic profile, she was characterized as "a democrat who appeals to feudal loyalties." Part of the reason for the precariousness of Pakistan's democracy is precisely that it remains a largely feudal society practicing democratic forms.

But Pakistan is hardly alone. The very same week Pakistan nearly imploded, a close and disputed election sent Kenya, heretofore one of the more stable democracies in Africa, into a convulsion of tribal violence. These bloody eruptions come against a background of less dramatic but equally important defeats for the democratic idea. Russia acquiesces cravenly as its nascent democracy is systematically dismantled in return for a bit of great-power posturing and a measure of oil-fueled pottage doled out by Czar Vladimir. China even more apathetically continues to concede stewardship of its market economy and modernizing society to a Leninist dictatorship. How many decades will it take before we acknowledge that the axiom that economic liberalization leads to political liberalization may not be axiomatic?

This comes after the Palestinians, in their first post-Arafat parliamentary election, give the mandate to a terrorist group. And as Lebanon, the leader of the Arab Spring of 2005, watches Syrian proxies systematically kill one member of parliament after another to deny the democrats the quorum they need to elect a like-minded president.

These defeats, marking the cresting of the 30-year democratic wave that had swept through Latin America, Eastern Europe, East Asia and even parts of Africa, raise more than theoretical questions. They challenge the core Bush notion that American foreign policy should be predicated on trying to spread democracy. Six years after 9/11 there still is no remotely plausible alternative to the Bush Doctrine for ultimately changing the culture from which jihadism arises. But while spreading democracy may be necessary, can it, in fact, be done? Continued...

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About The Author

Charles Krauthammer is a 1987 Pulitzer Prize winner, 1984 National Magazine Award winner, and a columnist for The Washington Post since 1985.

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Democracy-IV
Weak National Government with strong local Governance==accountability. National Governments are not accountable to their constituents, there's no getting around that.

When governance is primarily local, prosecution (or lynching) is possible.

National representatives simply vote themselves immunity from legal prosecution and always find means to avoid blame for anything their constituents find objectionable.

It isn't rocket science. Think about it before you call me a flake; a really funny and brilliant man pointed these things out to me--and gave me sources to look up the facts for myself. (Had he lived longer, he would have been another Samuel Clemens. Damn I miss him.)

Democracy-III
And another thing:
Feudalism, or Olgliarchy not being part of America?
If that is so, why did Joe Kennedy SR. purchase Jacqueline Lee Bouvier for marriage to Jack?

The only reason we have any semblance of representation is the fact that the American public is ARMED. We have a long and illustrious history of lynching politicians and those who would deny us our liberties. It is really a shame that few are taught accurate American history these days. [The same related families have the power that they did over 100 years ago.]
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