▲ | makeitdouble 8 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
I look at it from a different lens: the political system and what people's life look like isn't a predefined matrix. To take a mild example, we don't look at federal countries and assume it affects citizen's life in a radical way that can be straight attributed to the federal nature of it. Germany biggest differences from France probably aren't because of that. Sure it has an impact, but not in an easily predictable way. Authoritarian regime are prone to abuse, but that's not enough to guarantee it will be managed worse than the worse democratic countries. We've have democracies fully melt down and becoming literal hell on earth. I don't intend to praise authoritarian regimes and don't see them as sustainable, but IMHO there is a lot more to a country than just that. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | StopDisinfo910 8 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> Authoritarian regime are prone to abuse, but that's not enough to guarantee it will be managed worse than the worse democratic countries. You are missing my points by orienting the discussion towards an abstract concept such as well managed. Authoritarian countries mistreat part of their populations in a way which makes them morally abhorrent and that’s by design. You will hardly find people pointing it out and defending the marginalised in authoritarian countries because they themselves become the target of the state. I’m not blind to the fact that most of the apologists I have met in my life who are always happy to point that it’s relative and what about the majority actually happy often want nothing more than to be the authoritarian power themselves. This seems particularly relevant in the current American context. | |||||||||||||||||
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