by Mivat » Tue Oct 24, 2006 10:25 pm
Honor, Dedication and idealists are not something you will regularly find among the older politicians, as they have long lost any sense of those three things due to deals both above and below the table (honor), due to compromise (dedication) and painful and often shameful defeats (idealism). Among the younger politicians and the different youth-organisations, yes, but most older politicians know that an honorable, dedicated and idealistic politician is about as non-existant as an honest one. An honest politician doesn't exist, as someone that was honest wouldn't get voted into office because they actually DARED to say exactly what they ment, when they ment it or got asked about it. It would be a clumsy way of doing politics, and it would be a far too definite way. There would be no room for manouvering, there would be no room for backtracking in the face of uncomfortable questions, and there would be no room for comprimise. Have you ever seen such a politician? I think not.
The fact still remains that in a democracy, it is THE PEOPLE that vote representatives, be them congressmen/women, Prime Ministers or Presidents into office. Ultimately, THE PEOPLE are responsible for what happens in the aftermath of an election. The right to vote does not abolish each voter's responsibility for what a political party will implement in terms of policy, unless the party does something so insanely contrary to what they promise to do. You vote an ultra-right wing christian fundamentalist party who wants to take your country back to the dark ages, you as a voter are responsible for it when/if they actually manage that. (Given, the odds of this ARE pretty slim, as most people recognize insanity when they see it threatening their very way of life.) By this I do not mean that you are PERSONALLY responsible, but the voters share a common responsibility for the actions of the people they help get into power, regardless.
As Copper said: Unless you vote, you do not have any right to bitch and moan about the situation that happens. Period. It is your right, but also your DUTY as a citizen of a democracy to actually use the misfiring bunch of synapses that some would call a brain to figure out where you stand and then vote. People seem to forget that with the rights of being a citizen and a voter in a "free" democratic country, there are also duties. But some people cannot seem to not be out only to put icing on their own cake, and usually that goes by the rule of "the more I get the better".
In my opinion, politics should be about the will of the people, not the amount of money someone puts into a political party, or a politician's, pocket. I have never, WILL never and are not a fan of the 1 dollar, 1 vote-system that many countries seem to favour. In quite a few countries, Norway as well, it seems that most of the politicians has forgotten that they exist FOR the people, and that they themselves come from them. Instead of We, the people, it's seemingly turned into We, AND the people.
I probably have said way too much with this post, but there are, in my mind, some dire misconceptions stated in this thread that I feel that I cannot let go unchallenged or uncommented. But lets' get back to the original text that Fishi posted: I STILL cannot see where I went wrong in the characterization I made in my first post, and I STILL would like enlightenment from those who so obviously know better than I do.
