Originally posted by: Craig234
Originally posted by: BoberFett
Originally posted by: Vic
Craig, I'm having a little bit of trouble with your theory that "democracy" is when the people decide how you like and "dictatorship" is when they decide otherwise.
Likewise your notion that private is tyranny and public is freedom.
No need to even touch upon the obvious straw man of your red light analogy. That's like yesterday when you said that libertarians are opposed to liberal democracy (which is defined as democracy limited by constitution and rule of law).
I've noticed that about Craig. When things go his way, hey, that's democracy. You don't like it, vote to change it. When things don't go his way he turns into a screaming child, throwing a tantrum about how the system is corrupt. Apparently when the majority wants UHC, it's just the will of the people and not be questioned. But when the majority want war with Iraq, it must be a plot against democracy. Truly frightening how many people suffer from such cognitive dissonance.
While I'm not commenting on vic's tripe, whatever he said, I've noticed that about you. You get things bogglingly contorted.
In another post you were trying to 'argue' - the word has to be stretched - that if the government gets one policy wrong, then you have to conclude it gets them all wrong.
Here, you're trying to argue that either democracy is always perfect, or it's always broken.
No. Democracy is imperfectly implemented. Sometimes it gets things a lot right, sometimes a bit right, sometimes very wrong, and so on.
There's nothing wrong with saying both that democracy worked regarding Bush's going to war against the Taliban, and that it was corrupted when they hid the real cost of the medicare drug bill giveaway to their drug company donors from Congress, because it wouldn't have passed otherwise.
But you don't get that - you post these logically broken false dilemmas. How can you even know the phrase cognitive dissonance, and yet radiate it like Cheney radiates evil?
I'll explain this very simply for you. I prefer democracy to the alternative mankind is used to where the public doesn't have some artificial share of power called a vote and power is instead concentrated in an oligarchy. And I also prefer that democracy to work better than worse - more educated public not less educated; less propaganda domination not more; money dominating the system less, not more, and so on.
And while agreeing with that system, it doesn't mean I agree with the majority on every issue, so you might see me defend democracy, yet argue against their decision.
Is that so hard for you?