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In reply to the discussion: frankly, what I think we're doing here, is documenting the last gasps of democracy. Updated [View all]octoberlib
(14,971 posts)threat with their corporate tribunals. Political scientist, Juan Linz, thinks presidential democracies are doomed to failure because of the way they're structured. And , of course, there's the number one reason democracies fail: income inequality.
Juan Linz, the distinguished Yale political scientist, died on Tuesday morning in New Haven, Conn., at the age of 86. He was a great man whose death happens to have coincided with a series of news events that nearly perfectly illustrate some of the main themes of his work. Linz, you see, was a student of comparative government, of political institutions, and of democratic breakdown. He saw these, naturally enough, as related issues. He looked at the success of democratic institutions in Western Europe and their frequent failure in coup-ridden Latin America and saw the contrast as driven more by constitutional structure than by culture or economics.
And his analysis has a disturbing message for residents of the contemporary United States. The current atmosphere of political crisis isnt a passing fad and it isnt going to get better. In fact, its very likely to get worse. Much worse. And lead to a complete breakdown of constitutional government and the democratic order.
http://www.slate.com/articles/business/moneybox/2013/10/juan_linz_dies_yale_political_scientist_explains_why_government_by_crisis.html