Democracy is at variance with biology. The natural order established through
evolution is with the strongest at the top. However, we continue to define and
redefine ‘strongest’ in a number of different ways. We have transited from
physical strength, to some form of riches. It may well have been some form of
food in the hunter-gatherer era to any form of money in the 21st century.
Now, we are changing the definition to a nebulous thing we have trouble
labeling—power to the people. In a democracy, the person with power is the person
the majority of people want to have in power. In one sense, it is bandwagon
logic; we select at the voting box the person most of us respect, like, believe
trust, etc. It is equivalent to a flock of chickens in a barnyard, we recognized
the “top chicken” but we cannot tell precisely what it is about that chicken that
makes him or her the boss—the same is true of people.
Cultures treat the concept differently while retaining the
idea of a “natural order”, which we struggle to define and even codify. The definition
has to do with something as basic as survival of the fittest, which we have modified
over thousands of years of humanization. In that process, we changed the biological label
of hierarchy dominance from “natural order” to “moral order”. We have defined “moral punishment” to mean we
keep the “order” pure by punishing any deviation from “normal”; a concept
refined by the church for centuries; only church members from that specific
church can go to heaven, everyone else burns in a lake of fire.
The church leaders, by whatever name, are the civic leaders;
they set on the “right hand of God”. Therefore, in a fit of perverse logic, God
appoints the civic leader; God makes the appointment; therefore, people cannot
vote for a civic leader; no one can or should vote against God. This is
ingrained church dogma. Upsetting that dogma is what the current Middle East
revolution is all about. The people,
especially the young people, of the Middle East are seeking to change this “false”
hierarchy to what we in the United States and Europe and much of the world understand
as “democracy” They want a taste of the fairness and equality such a system of
government implies—they all want to go to heaven. It really is not Sunni against
Shiite, although church leaders want to shape the struggle in those terms, in
hopes that their sect will be the winner. It is democracy against caliphate; it
is pitting voter freedom against the church dogma.
The cultural universal is “natural” or “moral order”, with
all of its variations; it has an evolutionary or biological basis. Actually,
the connotation of the expression “moral order” is that democracy cannot be “moral”;
morality is the exclusive province of the church; secular morality is fairness
and equality. What the young people in the Middle East are saying is that they
can have morality without the church. If we can be good to each other with or without
dropping a tithe in the collection plate every Sunday, so can they.
In fact, the only biological correct thing to do is for all
people to be kind, fair, and equal; the only justification for moral punishment
is to direct it at those who are not kind, fair and do not treat all others as
equal. We can claim superiority over Sunni and Shiite for not following that
universal mode of behavior but if we do, we have to look closely at our own
society; racism, gay people, gender equality, and get over this damn Yankee
residue from the Civil War that seems to be ruling North Carolina.
This is a bit off-topic but worth hearing.
ReplyDeleteOur daily newspaper, the Seattle Times headline today announced that the State of Washington's unemployment rate had dipped to 4.7% in May. This is considered "full employment" by the US Dept. of Labor. It is certainly good news for our citizens.
By all measures, we are a "blue", liberal state. We are also a high tech state with the likes of Microsoft, Boeing, Costco, Amazon, Starbucks etc. as major employers. Our salaries are well above the national average, and yes, we do have unions. We are not hampered by so-called "Right to Work (at low wages)" laws. Our major corporations are quite profitable, sharing their success with stockholders AND employees alike by high wages and good benefits. We are the living proof that with well educated citizens and liberal state government, labor and management can both share in enterprise successes.
Contrast this with most Southern states in general and NC in particular. As recently as 2010, NC was considered one of the more forward-looking states in the South. The Research Triangle area was a model of high tech endeavor and was attracting top talent from local universities as well as throughout the US and abroad, thus greatly enriching the whole NC area.
NC has all of the potential of my home state of Washington but with the political changes recently instituted by the Pope/McCrory cabal, NC seems to be seriously regressing. What a shame to see a state with such great potential heading down the oligarchical path.