- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
While it is difficult to argue Brad's point, I think this is the result of a number of trends:
1. While most elected legislators in the early years were "self made" men who saw a turn in politics as a sort of public service or a way of rounding out their credentials, over the years they have been replaced by a class of "professional" politicians, who often have had no "real world" experience to speak of.
2. The exercise of power is corrupting, and politicians (especially long term ones) know all the various levers to pull (or create their own) to feather their nests. This leads to a political class which is quite oblivious or even at odds to the stated wishes of the electorate (hence the low regard that politicians have).
3. The current political parties and ideologies are less and less relevant to todays issues, and social institutions, demographics, technologies and economies have changed to such an extent that the current parties literally have no relevant answers to today's issues. Much like the Federalist and Whig parties in the United States (or the Unionist and Liberal parties in the UK, or the Progressive and Social Credit parties in Canada), the current Democrat and Republican parties may simply disappear (something which was breathtakingly fast in the US; especially see how quickly the Whigs were eclipsed).
So how to proceed? The answer isn't obvious. New political movements like "Occupy" and the TEA Party movement exist on a scale large enough to notice but not yet large enough to actually eclipse the old guard, and suites of technological and social tools which allow people to become disconnected from the older "grids" of power and influence and hook up in new "grids" of their own making to bypass the conventional gatekeepers (Libertarianism as a Social Movement) are reshaping society in ways that are quite unfamiliar to the current ruling elites and the institutions that support them, but have not reached their full fruition yet.
1. While most elected legislators in the early years were "self made" men who saw a turn in politics as a sort of public service or a way of rounding out their credentials, over the years they have been replaced by a class of "professional" politicians, who often have had no "real world" experience to speak of.
2. The exercise of power is corrupting, and politicians (especially long term ones) know all the various levers to pull (or create their own) to feather their nests. This leads to a political class which is quite oblivious or even at odds to the stated wishes of the electorate (hence the low regard that politicians have).
3. The current political parties and ideologies are less and less relevant to todays issues, and social institutions, demographics, technologies and economies have changed to such an extent that the current parties literally have no relevant answers to today's issues. Much like the Federalist and Whig parties in the United States (or the Unionist and Liberal parties in the UK, or the Progressive and Social Credit parties in Canada), the current Democrat and Republican parties may simply disappear (something which was breathtakingly fast in the US; especially see how quickly the Whigs were eclipsed).
So how to proceed? The answer isn't obvious. New political movements like "Occupy" and the TEA Party movement exist on a scale large enough to notice but not yet large enough to actually eclipse the old guard, and suites of technological and social tools which allow people to become disconnected from the older "grids" of power and influence and hook up in new "grids" of their own making to bypass the conventional gatekeepers (Libertarianism as a Social Movement) are reshaping society in ways that are quite unfamiliar to the current ruling elites and the institutions that support them, but have not reached their full fruition yet.