freediver wrote on Aug 5
th, 2025 at 10:33am:
I think we need a strong international organisation to promote democracy.
I disagree: and as a matter of a fact, democracy is NOT listed among the 30 articles of the UN UDHR.
...presumably because it's "the worst form of government" (that's the bit Churchill got right, even if it's an exaggeration)...
Quote:Something like the UN, but without the dictators.
Well, democracy doesn't produce the goods in most countries, so dictatorship is the unfortunate outcome (..it's actually cuased by a failing mainstream economic system)
Quote:Or NATO, but broader - including the east asian, pacific, south american democracies and perhaps India, South Africa and Botswana.
No; the UN, armed with the machinery to f defend the UN UDHR, is the correct body.
Quote:The UN, being forced to represent dictators, is not allowed to promote democracy.
Because most countries are in economic distress, as noted above.
Quote:It is allowed to promote "good governance" but is not allowed to equate that with democracy.
Correct, because government by 50% plus 1 of self-interested individuals (as in the democracies) , is not a good recipe for good govervance, and hardly represent the much-vaunted
universal franchise. Quote:Authoritarian regimes such as China a making good use of this for propaganda, as it legitimises them. The UN is also toothless. If no-one is prepared to act on it's rulings, which is typically the case, nothing happens.
China says it's instituting
common prosperity (sadly lacking in the West); the picture will become clearer by the end of the decade.
Quote:There are plenty of smaller organisations that could form the basis of this organisation, or the inspiration for it, but none with serious multigovernment backing (eg: https://www.idea.int/).
Meanwhile young people are losing faith in democracy:
https://www.cam.ac.uk/stories/youthanddemocracy"Faith in democracy: Millenials are the most disillusioned generation in living memory" ...unlike comfortable, ideologically blind conservatives like you....
Quote:The purpose or mandate would be something like:
1) Encourage new membership by helping the "sort of" democracies become functioning democracies - by promoting freedom of the press and getting rid of other limitations on freedom that threaten democracy, and laying out a clear path to membership. Bypassing the government (which would tend to run you round in circles) and communicating directly with the people.
See above: millenials want to buy houses like their parents did, not fuss about 'membership of democracy'
Quote:2) Calling out democratic backsliding, which seems to be a growing issue, even in the US.
And WHY is the US - the "Beacon on the Hill" - backsliding?
Calling it out won't help, without that understanding.
Quote:3) Weaponising trade (as an alternative to war). Stronger backing for trade sanctions on Russia for example, like Trump is trying to do by threatening India with tariffs for buying Russian oil. Promoting free trade among democracies, but as a secondary agenda to promoting democracy. A bit like what Trump is threatening, but a more coherent and cooperative approach. The logic behind this is that promoting freedom and democracy is a far more effective long term way of generating collective wealth than free trade, especially in the current situation organisations such as the UN are legitimising and being exploited by anti-democratic forces.
Russia is already sanctioned to the hilt by the West, the next step is India and China....but China has the rare earth's supply on which the US currently relies (just like the US controls distribution of best chip tech); Trump HAD to come to an agreement with China because of that fact.
Again you are ignoring economic realities and fussing about "democracy"....
Quote:4) Military intervention in failed states and in situations where people overthrow the government to establish democracy, to assist with the transition, advise on setting up a new constitution etc. This would help to overcome the processes captured by Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson - why it is so difficult to transition from dictatorship to democracy, because so much of the ingrained culture in the country works against that outcome.
"It's the economy, stupid" - the failed IMF/world bank US led system, and even the US has now bailed out of the WTO free-trade rules based on your beloved free markets.
Quote:It would provide an alternative to China's attempts to set up a trade and political block among mostly anti democratic regimes.
China is attempting to trade with the Global South - ie most countries of the world, as well as the EU, US and Oz who have discovered they can't compete with China...
btw, re this 'pro democracy' guy seeking refuge in Oz: is he seeking independence for HK - a Chinese province, - a goal which is treasonous?
In any case, most HKers are getting on with 'getting rich', not fussing about 'democracy'.