Evil Triumps Because Good is Disorganised
Sep. 17th, 2007 02:56 pm"All that is necessary for evil to succeed is that good men do nothing." - Edmund BurkeIntergroup squabbling is a very noisy way of doing nothing.
In the fight between the the liberal and conservative movements I've found that conservatives tend to be better organized. I've speculated that this is because conservative are better at rousing their side with rhetoric and following orders.
Liberals conversely, tend to question authority, which I think is why you don't see an all-encompassing liberal movement. Instead, you see GBLT groups and legalize-marijuana groups and pro-labour groups and pro-choice groups (etc) but they don't necessarily get along with each other.
Of course, being in a pro-X group means you probably think X is very important and therefore pushing topic-Y will seem like a waste of time. That's another part of the problem.
As an analogy, think of World War II and what it would be like if the allied groups couldn't agree on which country to liberate first. Europe would be controlled by fascists, and German girls wouldn't be nearly so fun to hang around with.
(There are exceptions of course, for about a generation the Liberal party governed in Canada because the various conservative factions could not get along. Ah sweet nostalgia.)
What brought this on? While reading through
no subject
Date: 2007-09-18 10:37 pm (UTC)Was there any purpose to the post beyond providing information? People got sidetracked into other discussion that belonged elsewhere, but did this prevent the original post from achieving its goal?
Ah, wait. I misread the purpose of the analogy to be about the discussion that triggered you, rather than to the larger matter of interest groups at odds with one another. That was very careless and sloppy of me. I apologize.
Let's take another look at the analogy, then. What's the liberal version of France, and why?
no subject
Date: 2007-09-18 11:16 pm (UTC)Personal example: Politically I'm roughly between the Federal Liberal and ND parties. When I vote I look to see who historically came in second place against the Conservatives and vote for them. I might not get the group I want, but I figure either choice is better then what I'm getting currently.
(I'll admit that in "Reform Fortress Calgary" this doesn't do much good seeing as how the Conservatives routinely get more votes then all the opposition party votes combined)
If I were in a province that changes governments more then once every two generations, I might vote differently. Unfortunately, my home is Alberta.
So step one is to get someone in power who will at least listen to you. True, he might not agree, but it's better then having someone who thinks you're evil simply for being pro-[choice|marijuana|GBLT rights|pagan|etc]
no subject
Date: 2007-09-19 12:47 am (UTC)I see why that would be frustrating, yes.