- Feb 8, 2001
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I am regularly amused by the comments posted here against the Tea Party.
The comments are inevitably to the effect that government should be reserved for those who have an "elite" background - those who are professional lawyers, professional politicians, the highly "educated" who know so much more what is good for us than we do ourselves.
There is an essential implication that elites have an overwhelming advantage of intelligence, training, insight and, well, whatever it is that makes them better than everyone else at the role of governance.
As a result, the overwhelming choice of liberals and progressives is to proffer a series of candidates and exemplars from their own class of "eliteness." And the electorate does sometimes come to buy the unending praises made in support of these elites, especially when they are sold such an "attractive" bill of goods by the sycophantic press.
Thus we suffer under the highly educated, highly experienced (except in what might really matter - private enterprise) would-be rulers of the current government.
The following video offers a clear vision of what might be the philosophical issue we face each election cycle.
Do we choose an "elite" aristocracy, much like that of the days when the divine right of kings prevailed, and just as onerous, or do we choose a more common man or woman who just happens to believe in the rights of free men and women to determine their own destiny unfettered by the millstone of imposed elitist ideas of what is best for them?
The Problem with Elitism
The comments are inevitably to the effect that government should be reserved for those who have an "elite" background - those who are professional lawyers, professional politicians, the highly "educated" who know so much more what is good for us than we do ourselves.
There is an essential implication that elites have an overwhelming advantage of intelligence, training, insight and, well, whatever it is that makes them better than everyone else at the role of governance.
As a result, the overwhelming choice of liberals and progressives is to proffer a series of candidates and exemplars from their own class of "eliteness." And the electorate does sometimes come to buy the unending praises made in support of these elites, especially when they are sold such an "attractive" bill of goods by the sycophantic press.
Thus we suffer under the highly educated, highly experienced (except in what might really matter - private enterprise) would-be rulers of the current government.
The following video offers a clear vision of what might be the philosophical issue we face each election cycle.
Do we choose an "elite" aristocracy, much like that of the days when the divine right of kings prevailed, and just as onerous, or do we choose a more common man or woman who just happens to believe in the rights of free men and women to determine their own destiny unfettered by the millstone of imposed elitist ideas of what is best for them?
The Problem with Elitism
