sohaibbhatti
Citizen
There is nothing one can say but to go for the jugular on this issue. An argument presented by Jabral Tariq is based on nothing but innuendo and opinion. Such hyperbole and opinionated writings serve no one, least of all him.
Reading the post I can not help but think how his opinions owe a lot to either his perception of socialism which he understands in a wrong manner or it is firmly based upon communism lines. Either way, you are wrong.
Democracy is a revolutionary idea; it is indeed the best forms of government not because it is the best form but because it is the least worst of all other forms. It is a revolutionary idea because it transferred the power from the wallet to the ballot and from the market place to the polling station. Traditionally rich people, which were so hatefully termed as upper class by the author, held the power and were free to do anything. It was only rich who could legislate and who, when they legislated, protected their rights at the expense of the poor. But the idea of democracy is revolutionary! It took the power from the market place and placed it in the polling station and transferred the power from the wallet to the ballot. People could move collectively and choose to vote the representative they wanted! People had a choice! People, if they were not happy with the work of their representative, could vote for another representative at the next election. It was and still is a revolutionary idea. The biggest product of democracy is the NHS in the UK. It was the people who voted in a Labour government and the labour government fulfilled the wishes of the people and established the NHS which was, and still is, free.
You can not defame the idea of democracy. It is this very cynicism that proves to be the root cause of the demise of democracy. This cynicism leads to the population not participating in the process of choosing their leaders and thereby giving those in power a mandate to stay in power for however long they wish. With democracy they at the very least have the chance of having their say and getting rid of those leaders who are not up to scratch.
And blaming democracy for the inequity and the discrepancy in the distribution of wealth is a sorry excuse for your argument, sir. If democracy flourishes such a phenomenon then so does dictatorships or any other form of government. This is what happened under General Ayub, General Yahya, General Zia and Musharraf. This is what happens in China where there is no democracy, in Burma and in most parts of Africa and the Middle East.
The issue is not democracy; it is you. It is your cynicism of not being a part of democracy that is the problem. Looking at India or the States or Europe is not a solution to the problem. Taking into account Indias population and the smooth transfer of power along with a governance system (albeit one that needs considerable reform and change and overhaul) is a testimony to the fruits of democracy. We, in Pakistan, are at a loss without such things. Take into account the governance system in Europe and holding the Executive to account, the independence of judiciary and the upholding of Human Rights and you will realise why democracy is a good thing.
Do not blame others for your inabilities to realise the true potential of a revolutionary idea which gave people a say in who their leaders can be. Do not use your baseless, extreme, sensationalist and obsolete opinions to prove your points. Let me remind you that before you draw your pen, or your sword, or your gun learn to open you eyes.
Regards,
Ebu
Reading the post I can not help but think how his opinions owe a lot to either his perception of socialism which he understands in a wrong manner or it is firmly based upon communism lines. Either way, you are wrong.
Democracy is a revolutionary idea; it is indeed the best forms of government not because it is the best form but because it is the least worst of all other forms. It is a revolutionary idea because it transferred the power from the wallet to the ballot and from the market place to the polling station. Traditionally rich people, which were so hatefully termed as upper class by the author, held the power and were free to do anything. It was only rich who could legislate and who, when they legislated, protected their rights at the expense of the poor. But the idea of democracy is revolutionary! It took the power from the market place and placed it in the polling station and transferred the power from the wallet to the ballot. People could move collectively and choose to vote the representative they wanted! People had a choice! People, if they were not happy with the work of their representative, could vote for another representative at the next election. It was and still is a revolutionary idea. The biggest product of democracy is the NHS in the UK. It was the people who voted in a Labour government and the labour government fulfilled the wishes of the people and established the NHS which was, and still is, free.
You can not defame the idea of democracy. It is this very cynicism that proves to be the root cause of the demise of democracy. This cynicism leads to the population not participating in the process of choosing their leaders and thereby giving those in power a mandate to stay in power for however long they wish. With democracy they at the very least have the chance of having their say and getting rid of those leaders who are not up to scratch.
And blaming democracy for the inequity and the discrepancy in the distribution of wealth is a sorry excuse for your argument, sir. If democracy flourishes such a phenomenon then so does dictatorships or any other form of government. This is what happened under General Ayub, General Yahya, General Zia and Musharraf. This is what happens in China where there is no democracy, in Burma and in most parts of Africa and the Middle East.
The issue is not democracy; it is you. It is your cynicism of not being a part of democracy that is the problem. Looking at India or the States or Europe is not a solution to the problem. Taking into account Indias population and the smooth transfer of power along with a governance system (albeit one that needs considerable reform and change and overhaul) is a testimony to the fruits of democracy. We, in Pakistan, are at a loss without such things. Take into account the governance system in Europe and holding the Executive to account, the independence of judiciary and the upholding of Human Rights and you will realise why democracy is a good thing.
Do not blame others for your inabilities to realise the true potential of a revolutionary idea which gave people a say in who their leaders can be. Do not use your baseless, extreme, sensationalist and obsolete opinions to prove your points. Let me remind you that before you draw your pen, or your sword, or your gun learn to open you eyes.
Regards,
Ebu