MR. SHAW’s assessment of the value of democracy is intrinsic
in and of itself.
Many hold the word or system “democracy” as sacred
and perhaps the best system ever devised by man to govern himself.
History has taught us, however, that even “democracy”
is a failed system, one used as a disguise for dictatorship by
those who possess wealth, and subsequently seek power, over those
who are poor, the plebiscites, the disenfranchised, the powerless.
The term democracy indicates a form of government where all the
State’s decisions are exercised directly or indirectly by
a majority of its citizenry through a fair elective process.
The elective process in Trinidad and Tobago is not fair, and as
such, democracy, in its pure form has failed the people of this
great land.
The latest example of this failure comes in the allegations made
by an ex-US Drug Enforcement Agency Associate Vernon Paul, who
pointed fingers
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Former
DEA associate
VERNON PAUL, who
“buss” the mark on a
PNM plot to plant
cocaine and a missile
in the water tank of
UNC MP SADIQ BAKSH
prior to the 2002 election.
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at
some high-ranking People’s National Movement (PNM) officials
in an attempt to manipulate the outcome of the 2002 general election.
This accusation is by no means a new one.
It just begins to skim the surface of a system so corrupt and so
void of social responsibility that it is amazing that citizens still
believe politicians when they say that: “The voice of the
people is the voice of God.”
A gross misconception if ever I have seen one.
Democracy is when political officials are allowed to get away with
tampering with ballot boxes on election night.
It is also the coincidence of electrical blackouts in marginal constituencies
during the counting of votes on election night.
Democracy is about Gene Miles being screwed to the cross after “outing”
a very corrupt PNM Administration in the 1960s with the “Lockjoint
Scandal” and the “Gas Station racket”.
It is about allowing her to die as a mental wreck and virtual vagrant.
Isn’t democracy great!
We know that some people will do anything to attain and retain power.
Some of our leaders, loverboys in their own right, have taken to
engaging in spiritual activities to give them protection and guidance.
It’s also amazing that democracy allows us to sneak out to
the Hanuman Murti in Orange Village whilst professing to be a devout
Christian, yet maintaining the utmost belief in the Holy Trinity.
Democracy is also successful when high officials of government could
meet with high-ranking “insurgents” in an unregistered
room at a very posh hotel in Port of Spain, two months before the
arrest of the leader of the group.
Clearly, when you are no longer useful, you are dispensable and
that my dear friends, is democracy.
According to Potter Stewart (1915 – 1985), Associate Justice
of the US.
Supreme Court: “Fairness is what justice really is.”
It begs the question -- Is democracy fair?
Is it fair when 40 per cent of the population is forced to live
below the poverty line when there is so much wealth within this
country?
Thomas Jefferson (1762 – 1826), the 3rd President of the United
States of America, said: “A democracy is nothing more than
mob rule, where 51 per cent of the people take away the rights of
the other 49.”
Jefferson may have been wrong in his assertion.
First to begin with, Trinidad and Tobago have been ruled by governments
more often than not that had attained less than 50 per cent of the
votes in the election.
Was it fair to the Organisation for National Reconstruction in 1981
when it got 91,000 votes in the election, but no seats?
That can’t be fair.
In the Westminster system of government, we have a winner takes
all policy.
Is it fair to all those who support the United National Congress
(UNC) and other Opposition parties to be denied the right of employment
and contracts in the public sector due to their political affiliation?
East Indians in Trinidad and Tobago were fundamentally correct to
feel alienated over the years from the political process because
they witnessed and experienced victimisation first hand.
Now, the Africans are beginning to feel the same way. Even though
“their own” is in power, the wealth is not reaching
the masses.
And that, my dear friends, is democracy for your money.
Democracy is when a government can thwart the application of the
Freedom of Information Act, and introduce amendments to repeal the
effectiveness of the Judicial Review Act.
It’s interesting to see in a democracy how the PNM spin-doctors
will get out of this latest controversy.
Bet your last dollar that some diversionary tactic will be used
to move the public’s attention away from the current allegations
by the ex-DEA associate that high-ranking PNM members had plotted
to plant cocaine and a missile in the water tank of then San Fernando
West MP Sadiq Baksh prior to the 2002 election.
They will first attempt to discredit the ex-DEA associate, saying
that he is a bad seed, that he is manipulating the system and that
it’s all lies.
Next, the Prime Minister’s Office will issue a statement saying
that the matter will be investigated to the fullest, and then, we
may even have an attempted assassination for good measure.
It always adds flavour!
Former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill (1874 – 1965)
said it eloquently: “The best argument against democracy is
a five minute conservation with the average voter.”
In our case, you will hear “PNM till ah dead” and “Panday
is meh God.”
Over the years, there have been several debates over the meaning
of democracy and its effectiveness. Ancient Greek Philosopher Aristotle
(384BC – 322 BC) stated that: “In a democracy, the poor
will have more power than the rich, because there are more of them,
and the will of the majority is supreme.”
His counterpart Plato (428 BC – 348 BC) had a countervailing
argument. He suggested that: “Dictatorship naturally arise
out of a democracy, and the most aggravated form of tyranny and
slavery out of the more extreme liberty.”
Have we thus become slaves to economic forces, the market place?
Do the rich still control the destiny of the nation?
Edward Dowlin described democracy in his country in this manner:
“The two greatest obstacles to democracy in the United States
are, first, widespread delusion among the poor that we don’t
have a democracy, and second, the chronic terror among the rich,
lest we get it.”
Alain Badion in a more cynical tone states: “Our democracy
is not perfect.
“But it’s better than the bloody dictatorships. Capitalism
is unjust. But it’s not criminal like Stalinism.
“We let millions of Africans die of AIDS, but we don’t
make racist nationalistic declarations like Milosevic.
“We kill Iraqis with our airplanes, but we don’t cut
their throats with machetes like in Rwanda.”
Politics has taught me a great many things, and I believe in some
tenets of democracy, but the system does not protect itself against
abuse, and thus, has proven to be ineffectual, somewhat a masked
dictatorship with an oligarch instead of a sole king or despot in
charge, but it comes down to the same thing.
We still lack confidence in the judiciary, because some judges have
been known to take bribes; your confidential financial information
is leaked to the public when you go up against the authorities (ask
Occah Seapaul -- former Speaker of the House of Representatives);
your telephone conversations are tapped; prime agricultural lands
are taken from farmers and used for building houses to place party
supporters; politicians consort with known elements from the criminal
underworld to achieve power; getting a job or getting something
done is about who knows you, not your qualification.
Many people are under the assumption that decisions are not made
by the politicians who are elected.
Besides being a rubber stamp for the prime minister, the Cabinet
is not even representative of the people -- a significant amount
of its members are not even elected.
Some believe that America’s Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
is calling the shots, or that some lodge (Free Masons) or cult has
rested control from the people.
Whatever it may be, one thing I am sure of: Democracy in Trinidad
and Tobago is not what you are brought up to believe and if we want
a better life for ourselves and the generations to come, remember
that the revolution begins with one.
PSALM 2006 (a satire): Manning is my shepherd, I shall be in want.
He leadeth me to see higher food prices at the groceries,
He maketh me to lie down on park benches,
He restoreth my doubts about the PNM party,
He guideth me onto the paths of CEPEP and URP for the party’s
sake.
I do fear him, for thou talk about the evildoers constantly.
The kidnappings and murders.
They do discomfort me.
Thou anointeth me with never-ending fear,
And my savings and assets shall soon be gone.
Surely poverty and hard living shall follow me,
And my jobless children shall dwell in my house forever.
- Amen! |