Monthly Archives: May 2018

Democracy vs Autocracy

Leaders pose during the family photo session at the APEC Summit in Danang, Vietnam, Saturday, Nov. 11, 2017. Front left to right; China’s President Xi Jinping, Vietnam’s President Tran Dai Quang, Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo, back left to right; Philippines’ President Rodrigo Duterte, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, U.S. President Donald Trump. (Jorge Silva/Pool Photo via AP)

As our American democracy comes under threat, I want to look at worldwide democracy versus autocracy.  Both models can be traced throughout human history.  The first recorded democracy was Athens around 500 BCE.  All citizens voted on each issue.  Citizens were men, no slaves or women allowed.  About 30% of the population voted.  Other Greek city-states also adopted the system and it lasted until Alexander took over.

Many primitive cultures were and are democratic.  Everyone has a say, and strong leaders were called on only in times of crisis.  Problem is, once a guy gets a taste of power, he wants to hold on to his power and maybe expand his reach.  Crisis becomes the rationale for retaining single man rule.  Note I use male pronouns, women in leadership positions were and are rare.

Men have a tendency to want to be in charge.  One strong personality can marshal support by offering a share of the plunder of war or land in the kingdom.  He whips the opposition (there is always opposition) and consolidates his rule.  Succession can be difficult, so rulers tried to create family dynasties.  This often met with some success, but not without turmoil inside and outside the dynasty.  They all eventually fail, with as many reasons as there are dynasties.

The dynasties tend to be bad neighbors, so warfare ensues, reinforcing the justification for autocracy out of self-defense.  Dynasties lead to imperialism, with the result of imposing autocracy on other countries.  The other countries don’t like outside rule, so as soon as they can they throw the autocrats out.

Another side effect of autocracy is corruption.  The autocratic class wants the power and wealth for themselves, thus restricting opportunity for advancement to an elite.  Everyone else wants to advance as well, so they cheat.  Black markets, smuggling, illegal cartels, organized crime, and bribery flourish.  The rulers resort to repression, exacerbating the situation.  Things get to the point where it is difficult to do most anything without bribery or other corrupt activity.  Economies like this tend to stagnate, leading to more unrest.

Racism is also a major factor.  The rulers always had pejorative names for the indigenous people, who were denied the opportunities enjoyed by the colonists.  The former Spanish and Portuguese colonies were the victims of rulers interested only in gold and souls.  It was necessary to cheat do do anything also.The French, Belgian, and Dutch colonies were exploited for resources and the rulers were just plain nasty.

Eventually the bad guys get thrown out, often replaced by another set of bad guys.  The rhetoric may be different, and lip service paid to democracy, but as all they have known is authoritarian rule, its mostly business as usual.  Some of the former British colonies did manage to become democratic, the USA, Canada, Australia, Botswana, India, and New Zealand, for example, but Uganda, Pakistan, and Zimbabwe, among others, remain under authoritarian rule.

What is needed for democracy to take hold?    Education, a tradition of opportunity to advance in the system, and most importantly, some wealth.  At the time of the American Revolution, the thirteen colonies had the highest per capita income in the world.  The other English-speaking colonies also had England’s democratic tradition.  India had Gandhi.

Democracies can also move to tyranny.  Fear tends to be the catalyst.  Many post-colonial countries started independence as democracies, but without any democratic tradition and the difficulties encountered in the transition, strongmen saw the opportunity to take over.  Many of them came from the military.  People initially accepted authoritarian rule in the hope of having stability and economic growth.

Many of the post-Soviet countries started as democracies, but strongmen soon took over.  They offered stability.  The two biggest and most dangerous retreats from democracy came in Weimar Germany and post-Soviet Russia.  Let’s look at them in turn.  Germany had several destabilizing conditions.  There was no well-developed democratic tradition.  Germany wasn’t unified until 1871.  There was an elected government, but the Kaiser and Bismarck called the shots.  After their defeat in The Great War, the reparations required by the Treaty of Versailles impoverished the nation.  The Weimar Republic was unable to lift the country out of a horrible depression.

Hitler, with his authoritarian approach fueled by fear generated by soaring unemployment coupled with propaganda blaming Jews rather than an onerous treaty led to his appointment as Chancellor in 1933.  Hindenburg was President, but the Nazis had strength in the Reichstag and an aging and weakened Hindenburg.

Hitler began by ignoring the treaty and began rearming the country which led to a return of economic stability.  His propaganda apparatus was effective in building a deep reservoir of support for his regime.  All his Master Race propaganda along with scapegoating Jews justified his expansionism, first in Austria then in the Czechoslovakian Sudetenland with its large German speaking population.

The non-aggression pact with Stalin and weak outside resistance led to the most destructive war in history.  The people had jobs, though.  Fear, propaganda, thuggery, and militarism set up the war.  Churchill’s refusal to cave in was what eventually led to Hitler’s defeat.  Oh, and Soviet resistance coupled with America entering the war overwhelmed the Wehrmacht.

When the Soviet Union disintegrated in 1991, it came after a period of growing nationalism in the subject states and a weakened Soviet government.  The Soviet State overreached in the arms race with the U.S. and the planned economy was causing unrest.  The reasons are more complex, but I have gone on too long anyway.

Latin America is another autocratic region with only a few exceptions, like Costa Rica.  The Spanish and Portuguese regimes were interested in two things: gold, and souls for the Church.  If someone wanted to significantly get ahead, it was necessary to cheat.  Indigenous people essentially had no rights.  When independence came, power shifted from Iberia to local ethnic European elites.  Things eventually get so bad the indigenous people revolt.  Usually a leftist autocracy results with a brief democratic interlude.  Even this change was often thwarted by U. S. Intervention.  The American government wanted stability and such things as human rights were ignored.

After the breakup and an attempt to build democracy, the Russian economy was horribly weakened.  There was much unemployment, and the government was attempting to wean the Russian people from their beloved vodka.  Fear and anger resulted in a return to strongman rule.  Democracy just does not take hold in a nation that had always had autocracy.

The western democracies tend to be fairly stable, but are vulnerable to bad neighbors.  There is always a right wing wanting to take over and destroy democracy.  The right gains strength when there is a source of fear.  Currently the influx of middle eastern refugees threatens to destabilize Europe.  Again, the underlying cause is racism and religious discrimination. The U.S. is currently experiencing the same phenomenon.  Racism and fear underlying the cry to Make America Great Again.  Great means white with tight control over those other people, especially ones from “shit countries”.

Hey, I have gone on way too long ranting about this stuff.  Problem for me is also fear that maybe the bad guys will really take over.

Spring

It’s Spring and the miracles are happening once again.  The grass is growing, the trees have leaves, the flowers are out, and the sprinkling system is all goofed up.

Carol started seedlings months ago and now they are going in the ground.  She asks me to put more water on the chard.  I can’t tell chard from kale.  She rolls her eyes and shows me where.

Winter is hard on sprinkler systems, especially the drip systems supposed to save water.  They get stepped on, kicked, blow apart, and just break.  I get soaked hunting down leaks and missing fittings.  I just discovered a new type of stake with sprinklers built in that may help.  We’ll see.

It’s getting harder to do all the fixing.  Sprinklers don’t work, but some of my parts aren’t in very good shape as well.  I have trouble getting up and down.  My knees hurt.  My back hurts.  I have trouble pressing tubing on fittings with my arthritic wrists.  I am getting lots of practice groaning.  Every year I have to splice the underground hoses because I chop into them with the shovel or axe.

Pulaski

Yes, the axe.  We have trees and shrubs and they have roots.  Right now I am in the process of replacing rock edging with bricks to make mowing easier.  Problem is, it is right next to a maple tree.  Did you know maples have shallow root systems?  I chop the roots with a Pulaski, a wildland firefighting tool with an axe on one side and a grubbing hoe on the other side.  It works well, but that big head is heavy.  I chop for a short time, stop to catch my breath, and chop again.  Carol has suggested I mark where the brick line is to go because my line wavers trying to miss the big roots.  What I have finished looks a lot better than rocks, however.

It’s worth it.  The yard and garden are beautiful, I get exercise, Lowe’s makes money selling me parts, and we will get lots of good stuff to eat.  The spring produce is mostly leafy greens, so I have to eat salads.  The evil woman even sneaks kale into the salads.

The Japanese Beetle War continues.  We applied milky spore to the lawn which is supposed to infect the grubs and kill them.  There is also a chemical grub product that’s only mildly poisonous.  The grubs eat the grass roots, killing it, then pupate and hatch the beetles when hot weather arrives.  The bare spots in the lawn are recovering and we may have a few less Beetles.  If only all the neighbors would do the same thing.

We also have a new rechargeable hand vacuum to suck the little demons off the leaves.  Leaves.  The creatures eat some leaves and ignore others.  They love many roses, ignore others, and love grape leaves.  They like linden tree leaves, but our tree is big and robust.  So much for our grape arbor over the patio.   We are investigating alternatives.  It’s good they don’t eat everything, or we would have to eat them.

In the meantime, beauty reigns.  The raspberry bushes are springing up, flowers are out, and the veggies are growing away.  We also are going to have peaches.  We had three frosts when the tree was blooming, but the frost mostly did a good job of thinning the fruit.

Puppies and Kittens

I was lamenting the current political situation with someone recently.  She says she spends down time looking at videos and pictures of puppies and kittens. She mostly avoids the news.  My approach is quite different.  I look at car crashes in Russia, high speed chases in     L. A., eruptions, earthquakes, forest fires, burning and collapsing buildings, and urban shootouts.

I do look at cute cat and dog stuff, but end up watching violent cat fights and cats chasing dogs.  What is wrong with me?  Yes, horrible things are being done by and to our government, but will my preoccupation with it all is not gonna do much good out there.  I have always been a news junkie, so maybe all this is unavoidable.  But, even my humor is turning black.  I like to tell old jokes, but even they are about some variety of mayhem.

Do you know about the Polynesian King who had just made a pact with a neighboring king to stop all the stealing and poaching that had been going on for years.  To celebrate, the neighboring king gave him an ornate hand carved throne.  The king had it installed in the Great hall of his thatched palace and had his old throne stored upstairs.  One day he was on his new throne and the old throne came cracking down from the thatched ceiling and killed him.  The moral is “People who live in grass houses shouldn’t stow thrones.”

I hadn’t thought about that joke in years, but this morning it came bubbling up out of my unconscious.  I told the story to my wife and it ruined our morning tea and chat session.  So the mess out there is creating an internal mess.  What to do?  I have only managed to get halfway through The Princess Bride, and I did Harry Potter last fall.  Is it time to reread Tolkien or should I give in and read Faust and Neitzsche?

The dark side of the Force seems to be upon me.  Yoda always told Luke to not give in to hate and rage.  My new pen and pencil holder is a Darth Vader coffee cup.  I guess I haven’t taken the message to heart.  I think I need a road trip.

Earthquakes

If you think I am obsessed with earthquakes, you are right.  I think the ground under me should stay still.  We already have enough trouble with the weather, let’s not have the earth move as well.  I am sure most people agree with me, especially those who live in earthquake prone areas.  The bulk of the population live in earthquake country because tectonic plate boundaries tend to be on sea coasts where most people live.

I don’t live in quake country.  Denver is fairly stable since the Rocky Mountains stopped rising.  There are lots of faults around and faults mean one area moves relative to another.  The mountains are lighter as they wear away and tend to pop up a little out of the thick, semi molten stuff down there.  So, motion and stress on the faults, therefore shaking.  It doesn’t happen very often.

When the Army started pumping toxic chemicals into the ground under Rocky Mountain Arsenal, the liquid lubricated some old faults and vertical cracks in the ancient rock at the bottom of the 12,000 foot well and what stress there was let go.  Denver experienced around 700 earthquakes, most of them minor but disturbing to the population near the Arsenal.  There were two quakes above magnitude five resulting in minor structural damage and broken glass near the Arsenal.

As you might expect, voices were raised.  Injection wells were used in other places with no surface consequences, so the shaking at the Arsenal came as a surprise.  There was a clear correlation between waste injection and quakes, so injection stopped. The stuff injected was pretty nasty, and other means were used to dispose of what was left after the Well was shut down.

I am not sure pumping toxic stuff into the earth is a good idea anywhere, even if it is thousands of feet down.  Toxic water can be treated, but the toxins don’t go away.  They have to go somewhere.  Sometimes they can be incinerated, sometimes buried, but they are still around.  We are doing a good job at fouling our nest, the only one we have.

Some evangelicals don’t think there is any problem because the planet’s days are numbered and we were given dominion over the land until then.  But, what if what they say are prophesies  are wrong?  These beliefs underpin some of the dismantling of environmental safeguards going on these days. I suspect the real reason is not theology, but greed.

Hair

Bald

Hair is part of my everyday consciousness, because I am mostly bald.  It started going when I was 27, plugging the shower drain every day.  I don’t have to worry about now.  I have fun with my lack of hair: men go bald because their brains push the hair out.  There are lots of other bald jokes, most of them dirty.  There is lots of humor about baldness because bald people are trying to escape from their trauma.

It is an ongoing ego blow.  Bald as an egg, chrome dome, cue ball, baldylocks, slick, it goes on.  We are a beleaguered population.  Then there is the discrimination.  It’s mostly unconscious, but people with good hair tend to get selected over the bald.  Just look at today’s  politicians. There are exceptions, but it is a distinct advantage to be telegenic these days.

For example, I once had a boss who was good looking with a nice shock of sandy hair.  When the Water Department was expanding, he was promoted to maintenance supervisor.  He did a fair job at that due to his mechanical skills.  His next promotion was to Plant Supervisor, responsible for running a big water plant with a staff of over twenty.  An affable guy, he did well in meetings and interactions as long as he didn’t have to think.  Problem was, he was only semi literate, unable to compose a coherent paragraph.  It eventually caught up with him and he was lateraled aside into a make-work job and eventually retired.  Good hair will only get you so far.

Look at our presidents.  Eisenhower was bald, but people believed he won World War II for us.  All the other recent presidents had hair.  Our current President, consistent with everything else, has a parody of good hair, wound around his head and dyed yellow.  He is so vain and out of touch with reality he thinks his hair looks good.  Oh, and it is all his.

Hair for women is even more important.  Many older women have thinning hair and go to some lengths to conceal the fact.  Women bald from chemotherapy have their hats scarves, and wigs.  Only a few have the courage to venture forth with a shiny head.  There are women who intentionally go bald.  It’s a guaranteed way to stand out in a crowd.  Also, there are some men who find bald women sexy.  They do have that stubble, however.  If a woman gets a little loopy and takes her hair off, the baldness is the lead headline and photograph.  Britney Spears earned permanent fame for shaving her head.  You have to be crazy to do that, right?

So, be sure to have some sympathy for those of us with shiny heads.  We are another beleaguered and often derided minority.  I often speak to people with really good hair if we can work out some sort of a deal on an exchange but no one has ever taken me up.  Sad.