Politics: Democracy is not natural
Territorial Imperative.
I've written quite a bit about how the instinct of territorial imperative drives human behavior.
Some recent examples:
- Ukraine - democratic elections overturned because of fraud
- Afghanistan - 15 candidates for president claim voting irregularities... 15???!
- Canadians believe U.S. CIA will "steal" Romanian elections???!
Children do not share instinctively. Infant democracies or democracies in waiting have difficulties because the children... er, factions... do not want to share power. It is better to be Lord of the Manor than have manners.
So, should the U.S. give up trying to influence or force countries into democracies? Not necessarily. But perhaps it is time to quit talking about democracies and use the term "representational government". The U.S. is, in fact, not a true democracy and does not promote true democracy. We directly vote in representatives (but not the president who is voted in by representatives in the "electoral college") who then vote their conscience or lack thereof in running the country... and that may not reflect the will of the people who elected them.
Then why the big concern about voting fraud if the guy who is elected can do what he wants anyway? Well, why go to the doctor when you're sick if you're going to die someday anyway? If the voters don't have a chance to fairly elect someone who may actually represent them instead of oppress them, then we have a good old dictatorship. Not too many dictators do a good job of representing the will of the people.
The representative form of government is the only chance for ordinary people to have a chance that their government will be for them instead of against them. So, even if voting is dangerous, even if voting is not perfect, the chance to vote and change the policies of the government is important... and it is the first step for the children to learn to really share. People who already have that privelege should help others gain that same privelege.