Your argument is a straw man. Vouchers aren't meant to go to elites only, the proponents of vouchers want to apply them on a pretty broad scale. They want to do this because the U.S. public education system has become a joke. In a 1999 survey of seniors at 55 of our best colleges and universities, almost 80 percent earned a D or F grade on a high-school level American history test. Take a look at our colleges; you will see a high percentage of foreign student in graduate level scence and engineering courses, up to half in some classes, because American kids aren't making it there. Vouchers are at least an attempt to break the stranglehold of the teachers unions and the NEA, which are more responsible than anyone else for creating this mess.AdmiralKanos wrote:How is this any different from the "benevolent dictator" scheme? The nature of a dictatorship is completely dependent upon the whims of one man. That is precisely what is wrong with it, and while some dictators are better or worse than others, the fact remains that it is a fundamentally unjust society. Fascism, in and of itself, is still wrong.
As for transitioning to democracy, all you need for a democracy is a reasonably aware populace, hence the importance of public education (which the Founding Fathers of the US understood, but which right-wingers today dismiss in favour of vouchers/private schools for elites and shit for everyone else).
I agree that an informed electorate is essential to a republic such as ours. Unfortunately, our public schools today are not giving us one. Quite the opposite, in fact.
As for whether or not a dictatorship is morally defensible... Well, I grant you there can be dictators who can be relatively benevolent. But the system has a giant flaw in that it facilitates arbitrary rule and abuse of power. Most dictators have not been benevolent; they've usually been corrupted by their power. The fact is that a so called "benevolent despot" could potentially be the best ruler of all - needn't pander to an electorate, can make swift decisions where parliaments take forever to debate things, etc. But finding individuals who can resist the corrupting effects of power is the tricky part. And when you install someone who turns out not to be such a noble character, you're screwed; he can become a tyrant, and he now has all the machinery of a modern state to help maintain his power. This is why for all its faults, a democratic republic remains, in the words of Winston Churchill, "the worst form of government, except for all the others that have been tried."