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Both the neocons and the islamists are antiliberalism, as they believe that there is a moral decay. Both use antidemocratic means to subvert constitutional powers to theoretically restore that moral value. Yet in order to have "freedom", functional (unsubverted) democracy is required, one with an informed public, and a way of checkpointing radical usurpers in the executive. This is the very thing the neocriminals are fighting. So what gives?
One of the problems in a secular democracy is that the only pole of authority is the elected government. Both the islamists and the neocons promote a second pole, in a metaphorical throwback to the tensions between pharoe and karnak. The king would share authority with the religious leaders, and between them produce the power of government.
British democracy has survived a long time, partly by doing this very thing, and keeping some unelected ayatollahs in the house of lords and the palaces, who are in "values" opposition to a purely elected democracy. Many in britain call for a more elected government, if not totally elected. These are the same lines of thought as the american DU left belief in secular democracy... yet one must admit that there is very little proof on the ground, in terms of longevity, that purely secular democracy can last.
That the most warlike imperial nations like nazi germany and bush amerika rise out of secular democracy, seems when the leaders step in to this alternate pole of authority and occupy both chairs of palace and temple (pharoe and karnak). In iran, the constitution actually recognizes both poles, in an attempt to create some sort of balance. This is flawed due to the wrongful attempt to use sharia to repress womens rights and civil rights.
China, has pursued the american way, of a purely secular system and this has indeed produced a horrible ugly litany of crimes. So perhaps best practice must come forward to fill this unwritten vacuum where an official constitutional second pole of authority is admitted to the system of governance.
For anti-religious persons, to say that there is no second authority is disengenuous, as universities have been that second pole of unofficial government in their world, and this has indeed served as the "karnak", where ideology is refined and reflected back at the palace. The neocons have set about to subvert this by creating their own fantasy knowledge and denying the authority of what has been the american second pole for several decades. Perhaps the problem is that it is not written in to the constitution, and that we have not formally made a place for an "ethical" or "moral" opposite.
How do we look at the flaws that are being exploited by the neocons and the islamists in the light of preventive constitutional maintenance?
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