Perinquus wrote:I never claimed the current system is perfect, but following this prescription of BS's is a cure that I think could well turn out to be worse than the disease.
Why? The current system makes it so that only the very wealthy and well-connected can possibly hope to participate. Are you seriously arguing that effectively restricting eligibility to the wealthiest 1% of the population is somehow better than restricting it to the other 99%?
Why is it indispensable for a leader to "understand" the majority of the people? Oh to a certain extent it is, I grant you. No leader who is too far out of touch with the people he leads can represent their interests well.
It appears you answered your own question, so I won't comment.
But lots of great leaders in history have not been what you would call men of the people, yet they were still great leaders. Marcus Aurelius, for example, is rightly considered one of the greatest of the Roman emperors, but how well could he have "understood" a plebiean tavernkeeper or peasant farmer? George Washington was a great president, if for no other reason than that he showed immense restraint in using or keeping power at a time when it was his for the taking, but he was a wealthy planter who had never wanted for anything in his life, so how well would he have "understood" the average American of his day. Ditto for Thos. Jefferson, who was also born into wealth. Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt were both filthy rich, and yet they did very well as leaders, despite the fact that neither of them could have "understood" the common man perfectly, never having been in his economic bracket. I could think of boatloads of wealthy, priveledged men, some born to it and some self made, who were excellent leaders.
So you can think of some rich men who were good leaders, therefore it's better to restrict politics to rich men than to restrict it to the 99% of society which isn't rich?
More to the point, how does this change the fact that the vast majority of the population has been locked out of the political process by the machinations of wealth? In some of the older democratic societies which the Founding Fathers (partially) copied, people had to give up personal wealth in order to become leaders. The term "public
service" actually meant something in that context.
Of course, there are examples of the "common man" who seemed to stay very grounded in their middle class origins, and became great leaders also - Harry S. Truman is an example of this. But I still maintain that a lot of people who become wealthy do so because they possess certain admirable qualities - drive, energy, talent, determination, a good work ethic, a willingness to make sacrifices in the present for the sake of the future, and other qualities, and these same qualties often make them exactly the sort of people you most want to have running the show. To close them off from positions of leadership would be to deprive the country of a vast reservior of human capital. History is full of examples of nations that squandered their human capital and saw their fortunes suffer for it.
That's a long-winded way of arguing that rich people deserve to lead, and everyone else is inferior. I still call bullshit.