If we look at the spread of democracy around the world, the only places it has managed to get a foothold and last is in the countries inhabited by either ethnic or cultural Indo-Europeans. Starting in antiquity with Athens, evolving in Rome, surviving the onslaught of the Church and breaking through in England, continuing with America, then slowly spreading all over Europe, the democratic ideal has toady finally managed to spread itself to all places whose heritage is either ethnically or culturally Indo-European. All the lands either conquered, colonised, or culturally assimilated by the descendants of the speakers of Proto-Indo-European are now democratic.
Indonesia, being dominated for over its entire history by the Indo-Aryan ideals of its cultural superior in the North (India), has recently managed the transition. In the tiny nation of Bhutan, which was until recently a full-fledged monarchy, the King himself decided to shift to a democratic system. Australia, being similarly dominated by the western branch of the Indo-European tree, is another example. South Africa, another state with massive Indo-European influence, is democratic today.
However, all attempts to spread the same ideals to peoples who are not ethnically or culturally Indo-European have failed. Africa - the entire continent testifies to this fact. The Arab Muslim world - another subcontinent where no democratic idea penetrates. China - they decided that state-corporatist fascism was better than democracy.
The only counterexamples are Japan and South Korea - and both are or were massive strongholds of Buddhism, an Indo-European offshoot.
This raises an interesting question - is there something about the cultural attitudes of the Indo-European countries which somehow makes democracy "work" in those regions? Is there something embedded in Indo-European thought that allows democracy to survive and thrive? Is it that all attempts to broaden the democratic circle beyond this group are bound to fail? They have so far, at least.
Thoughts?
Indonesia, being dominated for over its entire history by the Indo-Aryan ideals of its cultural superior in the North (India), has recently managed the transition. In the tiny nation of Bhutan, which was until recently a full-fledged monarchy, the King himself decided to shift to a democratic system. Australia, being similarly dominated by the western branch of the Indo-European tree, is another example. South Africa, another state with massive Indo-European influence, is democratic today.
However, all attempts to spread the same ideals to peoples who are not ethnically or culturally Indo-European have failed. Africa - the entire continent testifies to this fact. The Arab Muslim world - another subcontinent where no democratic idea penetrates. China - they decided that state-corporatist fascism was better than democracy.
The only counterexamples are Japan and South Korea - and both are or were massive strongholds of Buddhism, an Indo-European offshoot.
This raises an interesting question - is there something about the cultural attitudes of the Indo-European countries which somehow makes democracy "work" in those regions? Is there something embedded in Indo-European thought that allows democracy to survive and thrive? Is it that all attempts to broaden the democratic circle beyond this group are bound to fail? They have so far, at least.
Thoughts?
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