• @kava
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    2 days ago

    This is why the older I get, the more cynical I become about democracy. People are easily frightened herd animals who often refuse to look past the surface level shiny veneer. It always devolves. Every single democracy in history falls prey to the populist who takes advantage of this human weakness.

    The modern globalist system has left you out of the manufacturing job you expected to have? Are you frightened about your financial future and your children’s future? Here, I have a solution for you. We will build a wall and deport the brown people. It’s all their fault. Please ignore the man behind the curtain.

    Instead of us having an educated populace that sees through the wool being pulled over their eyes, they instead put their heads in the sand and choose to full-send into whatever right-wing ideology is thrown their way. It happened before, it will happen again.

    The superior system, I think, would look something like the Chinese although they are not perfect by any means.

    What they do is in primary school, they test the children and see who has a strong aptitude. They take these children out of the normal class and groom them to be party leaders. These party leaders then eventually end up as the leaders in the future. China actually is a pseudo-democracy- it’s just that only party members get to vote. And there are actually over 2 million party members. But the difference there is that it’s more of a meritocracy. There is still nepotism and whatnot, but the leaders slowly rise up over time based on results.

    Look at Xi Jinping for example

    He lived in a yaodong in the village of Liangjiahe, Shaanxi province, where he joined the CCP after several failed attempts and worked as the local party secretary. After studying chemical engineering at Tsinghua University as a worker-peasant-soldier student, Xi rose through the ranks politically in China’s coastal provinces. Xi was governor of Fujian from 1999 to 2002, before becoming governor and party secretary of neighboring Zhejiang from 2002 to 2007. Following the dismissal of the party secretary of Shanghai, Chen Liangyu, Xi was transferred to replace him for a brief period in 2007. He subsequently joined the Politburo Standing Committee (PSC) of the CCP the same year and was the first-ranking secretary of the Central Secretariat in October 2007. In 2008, he was designated as Hu Jintao’s presumed successor as paramount leader.

    The way it works is you start in a lower spot and work your way up slowly over time. And he was actually destined for failure due to his father being a “traitor”

    The son of Chinese communist veteran Xi Zhongxun, Xi was exiled to rural Yanchuan County as a teenager following his father’s purge during the Cultural Revolution.

    But his results ended up pushing him to the top anyway.

    This sort of meritocratic technocratic society will always win out over our populist oligarchy. And to the doubters, consider that our system is not any less elitist.

    Instead of testing children and grooming them for leadership, we do it based on last name and wealth. If your parents went to Harvard, you grow up with tutors and extracurriculars and all the support you could want. Then you are groomed for success by joining an Ivy League school, you join some sort of fraternity that presidents were a part of and you meet the future senators and CEOs.

    It’s the same thing except instead of results and meritocracy- it’s more influenced by wealth and nepotism.

    Of course I’m not claiming the Chinese system is somehow ideal, but I believe democracy is fatally flawed. Plato wrote about this in “The Republic” already countless years ago. Ironically, in his ideal Republic (which to be fair is sort of a dystopia) they actually groom capable children like the Chinese do for party leadership.

    Maybe we can just develop generalized artificial intelligence and have it run our society for us. I’d have more faith in the AI than I do in our congress.