collegerankings

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Hugo Chavez, RIP

Posted on 6:58 AM by Unknown
The world became a slightly better place last week with the passing of Venezualan dictator / clown Hugo Chavez.

This piece from the Atlantic nicely summarizes the case, though I would argue that it is both a bit too kind to Chavez and that it overstates the differences between Chavez and other initially popular leaders who gradually morphed into oppressive and ridiculous dictators, such as Mussolini, Castro, Mugabe and so on. Chavez was only the latest iteration of what is, or at least was until the last decade or so, pretty standard governmental fare in many parts of the world.

More broadly, Chavez does a nice job of illustrating the tensions inherent in the common, but imprecise and incorrect usage of "democracy" to mean both a system of government with elected leaders and a system of government that allows some reasonable amount of freedom to its subjects, along with some amount of security of person and property from the depradations of the state. Though Chavez won repeated re-election, his system was not democratic in the sense just described. Prior to its own linguistic corruption, liberalism would have been a better term than democracy to capture what the second meaning just described. For liberalism in that sense, elections are neither necessary, as in colonial Hong Kong, nor sufficient, as Chavez illustrated. Indeed, there is a constant tension between electoral populism of both right and left (and they are usually not so different in the end) and the freedom and security of a liberal regime.

Or, one can pass on the niceties and just quote H.L. Mencken: "Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard."

Addendum: a very nice piece from Megan McArdle
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Michigan 28, Akron 24
    Dodging a bullet does not even begin to describe this near debacle, with Akron having shots into the end zone on the final four plays! Local...
  • Book: Paying for the Party by Armstrong and Hamilton
    Armstrong, Elizabeth and Laura Hamilton. 2013. Paying for the Party: How College Maintains Inequality . Cambridge, MA: Harvard University P...
  • In praise of payday lenders
    From the Atlantic, something I never thought I would see: a thoughtful, empirically grounded defense of payday lenders and other alternati...
  • Interdisciplinary Seminar in Quantitative Methods
    Local readers will be keenly aware that the most obvious thing that we lack around here is enough seminars to go to each week. After all, th...
  • Movie: Monsters University
    Monsters University is what you get when put Monsters Inc and Revenge of the Nerds into a blender. The animation is gorgeous and Billy Cryst...
  • Fantasy economics
    A proposal (apparently serious) for a REPEC fantasy economist league . I am speechless. Hat tip: Charlie Brown
  • Assorted links
    1. On the history of German restaurants in Ann Arbor. Mainly because it is not within walking distance of campus, I have yet to make it to ...
  • Assorted links
    1. How to save Microsoft ? Sounds like things have come a long way from when they used to mock the corporate culture at IBM (e.g. "the ...
  • Play: My Name is Asher Lev
    My Name is Asher Lev has one more week to go at the Performance Network  in Ann Arbor and is well worth the time. All three actors, especial...
  • Assorted links
    1. Drunken island monkeys . 2. Free speech versus occupational licensing in Kentucky. 3. Virginia Postrel on how to save Barnes and Noble ....

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (257)
    • ►  September (18)
    • ►  August (34)
    • ►  July (58)
    • ►  June (4)
    • ►  May (16)
    • ►  April (25)
    • ▼  March (35)
      • Michigan skit night: faculty staff skit
      • Assorted links
      • Selection bias, anyone?
      • Universities respond to incentives: who knew?
      • The mystery of fascism
      • Robert Heinlein writes to Theodore Sturgeon
      • Movie: Oz the Great and Powerful
      • Jim Hines on NPR on tax havens
      • Michigan skit night - Jim Hines video
      • Assorted links
      • WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook
      • Take a drive (or two or three) through rural Sierr...
      • The married male wage premium
      • Play: Good People
      • New US News economics rankings
      • Movie: Dead Man Down
      • Assorted links
      • Assorted links
      • PDD: science edition
      • A comic in honor of prospective student day
      • On enlightenment
      • Becky Blank to UW-Madison
      • Assorted links
      • Assorted links
      • Causal follies: gun control edition
      • Hookups: pro and con
      • Academic follies: physicist / drug mule / lonely g...
      • Movie: Amour
      • Hugo Chavez, RIP
      • Movie: Jack the Giant Slayer
      • Assorted links
      • Whole Foods comes to Detroit
      • Cheerleading as job training ....
      • Not really a nerd after all ...
      • Causal follies: Illinois basketball edition
    • ►  February (41)
    • ►  January (26)
  • ►  2012 (243)
    • ►  December (47)
    • ►  November (30)
    • ►  October (28)
    • ►  September (45)
    • ►  August (73)
    • ►  July (20)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile