Saturday, May 26, 2012

Reflections on Government

Keeping the Herd Together:

Man is gregarious and seems to thrive in company. Biology has played a major role in the evolution of man’s behavior and interaction with other humans. It was very clear from early pre- historic times that some of us were endowed with more physical power while the others had more mental prowess. Originally the numbers were the determining factor on which the humans controlled other humans. Soon the humans with mental prowess cooked up schemes which started to trump physical numbers only. A pointed stone could do more damage than a fist. Soon there were leaders and followers.  Thunders were installed as Gods and Mountain caves were the new temples. The smarter bunch conjured up Religion and the Priests became the heads of first governments. The Priests continue to determine a lot of government though we now have parallel civilian governments which call the shots also. The agrarian society kept humans in place for a very long time and most of their effort flowed into the growing food and feeding themselves. The conflict was small scale because the natural resources were plentiful. The idea of a government by some form of entity continued to thrive in form of churches and the need to defend the communities. The idea of keeping the herd together for myriad reasons was here to stay.

Abraham Lincoln’s quote “Government is coming together of people to do for one another collectively what they could not do as well as or at all privately” in Dall W. Forsythe’s Memos to the Governor may be cogent but tells us only half a story as to why people come together. The idea that people get together to do things collectively what they cannot do privately does not really explain the purposes of this collectivity. The history of mankind lies in the motivations surrounding this collectivity. The real question is which way the collective herd is lead by those endowed with the mental prowess to destroy the other herds. And what a tremendous havoc this collectivity has caused in many cases.

Destructive Power of the Herd:

The collective herd led by the most destructive of leaders armed with lethal weapons like nuclear weapons have killed about 41 million people in wars waged in every corner of the world in 20th century only .Sometimes it is based on national pride like when Great Britain chose to subdue Falkland Islands which killed 30000 people. Ethnic violence in India/ Pakistan partition had killed 800000 people in 3 months. Pol Pot killed 1,770,000 in Cambodia. Civil war in China killed 6,200,000 people. (Milton Leitenberg 2003 in Cornell University Peace Studies Program). American Civil war killed about 618, 000 Americans. The American atom bombs dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima set another record by killing about 75000 people within a week. The wages of collectivity have been swerve and swift. It   makes one think and question the uses of collectives which are now sometimes known as democratic governments. We also need to remember Hitler and holocaust as an example of the very destructive nature of the herd. It tried to decimate a whole community of people. It was later tried on a small scale by Serbs in Balkans.  Rallying and getting together is not all good

The arrival of industrial age and later technological breakthroughs have in last few decades handed more power to the leaders of  the herd and it is a concern to the survival of the world as we know it. 

All is not Lost:

Despite the destructive nature of collectives to do things together and establish institutions that promote good of people have thrived and have brought the kind of civility to our societies which clearly distinguish us from the animalistic nature of human instincts. In most modern societies the governments and people need each other. The principle of rule of law is perhaps the most important concept invented in the modern times. It is not perfect answer to all the human problems but it instills order and brings peace to communities and societies which improve the quality of lives of people.

The Role of Modern Government in Society:

Abraham Lincoln’s words “coming together” have taken a different meaning in our modern society. First a government is the only entity that could use force. All other institutions have no such force. So what does it do with this force other than waging wars? It incarcerates people (more than 2 million in US), it enforces the economic burden on some and relieves it on others and in reality can forbid you to do things like driving over 65 miles or eat foods that may make you obese. And ultimately the meaning of government since Lincoln uttered his words has been transformed and become highly complex with the modern technology. The government can watch anyone at home via satellites and other gadgets. The governments can put bracelets on people and watch them wherever they go. The video cameras watch you at road intersections. Above all when people get together to protest or oppose something which the government does, it can watch you with drones from above and make you a scapegoat.

Laissez Faire:

An extreme fringe of people argues that the government’s power to use power to control individual lives through coercive force and economic controls should end. They in fact would like the people to be nincompoops. They would like to school children at home, build our houses wherever we like and as we like. They detest government interventions in housing, jobs, taxes and other economic activities. These people also feel that government can do no good and there is no such thing as public good.

Democracy and Government: 

In reality the governments have done a lot of good to the people they serve although they tend to self destruct at times. Historically we have come a long way. Firstly, the people can now talk and discuss the failings of the governments. Facebook and Twitter has shown in the Middle East that social interaction on the world wide web can confront the government. Secondly the increasing availability of safety net for the poor, deprived and oppressed has shown the advantages of collective actions. Thirdly the proliferation of electoral systems through democracies has made collective actions more viable. The democracy in large nations however is still a messy business and the progress towards human good and justice has been terribly slow. Democracies as practiced in the city states have not translated into good democratic practices in large monoliths like USA, Russia, India and China. They remain very imperfect societies where all good had to be muddled through.

 Mario Cuomo was probably the most policy savvy Governor of New York ever. He served the state very well and saved a lot of money to the state. Yet in the end he lost the election to an unknown. The people got tired of his budget cutting and advocating good economic policies. 

In the end I must say that Lincoln’s statement regarding government as getting together of people to do what they cannot do alone is correct but in an entirely different context than he thought. We are still trying to find out as to why the elements of governments that do good for humans are also the instruments to inflict heavy damage to them.

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