← Back

Your message to the BLOGMASTER was sent

Submitted by Charles Knighton
Democratic and Republican candidates Trump and Clinton
Democratic and Republican candidates Trump and Clinton

One can only hope that Barbadians are viewing what has transpired in the US over the last 25 years or so as a cautionary tale, one never to be emulated in their local politics. A democracy cannot function without good losers. Human beings are not naturally inclined to surrender power to their ideological and cultural adversaries; a society must train and educate its citizens—civilize them, if you will—to tolerate political defeat, seek compromise, and work patiently to regain power by winning the next election. This has always been the fundamental problem with transplanting democracy in the Middle East: There are precious few moderates, and they inevitably lose out to more ruthless extremists.

It’s not just the Iraqis, Syrians, Egyptians or Palestinians who have “a moderate” problem. America now has one too. A recent Pew Research survey found that Americans are deliberately sorting themselves into red and blue tribes; they seek to live, work and socialize with people who share their worldviews and shun those who do not. One out of four Democrats and one out of three Republicans sees the other party “as a threat to the nation’s well-being.” It is these people, with the most vehement views, who now shape their politics: Why compromise with evil? As a result, Washington is dysfunctional, and Congress can no longer reach consensus, make decisions, or even agree how to pay to rebuild aging infrastructure. In their ideological and cultural silos, meanwhile, their distrust of and contempt for the other tribes deepens.

In study after study, political scientists are finding that Republicans and Democrats view each other with a growing disdain that borders on hatred. In one recent experiment, Democrats and Republicans showed instant, automatic bias against people of the other party—more bias, in fact, than whites show against blacks, and vice versa. It’s the one form of bigotry that’s still acceptable, with entire TV networks devoted to making Democrats or Republicans look stupid or dangerous. This year’s race to replace President Obama seems to have fully opened Pandora’s box. I have to wonder what will be the fate of this once great experiment in Democracy.


Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

76 responses to “USA Presidential Elections: Democracy in the Balance”


  1. Correction: Yes many shale producers are NOW out of business


  2. @Dee Word

    They will not ditch it but would have taken away learning from the 2007 Wall Street meltdown and applied a deeper strategy of mitigation.


  3. The Chad9999 poster on 02/09/2016 @ 7:02am said “the United States has a very bad system of government”. This poster disagrees. It does not have a bad system of government, it just has a system that is needing some updating. There is controversy that Texas Senator Ted Cruz should not be racing “he is not a natural born American”. His mother is American but he Cruz was born in Canada (Calgary, Alberta) NOT the United States. The Constitution provides that “No person except a natural born citizen shall be eligible to the Office of President. There was also controversy concerning nationality of President Obama. President Obama. His father was a native of Kenya in Central Africa. His mother, though was American born in Wichita, Kansas and Obama himself is natural born, born in Honolulu Hawaii. He could not be denied right, President of the United States. Cruz does not have right and surely will not be allowed entrance into the white house.

    Also, a presidential debate has been offered in every month since August 2015. The Americans soon will be seeing campaign ads – lots but have been given opportunity to hear from the presidential candidates regularly in debate. All are really a waste of time excluding these two: Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton. Obama I say was disastrous. His predecessor George W. Bush was totally disastrous as would be Donald Trump. Oh! Chad9999 poster, the United States you know is a rather large country and unlike Barbadoes it does have transparency and integrity. It also has Eminent Domain law and persecutes dishonest lawyers, judges, politicians too. Barbados don’t you know is surviving on life support. Both government parties, the BLP and DLP is really a laughing matter.


  4. @ David
    Have you considered that the US dollar is treated as the world’s reserve currency? A luxury Obama and US governments have come to take for granted in economic planning.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    They don’t take this for granted.
    Every serious contender who has dared to voice a global move away from this ridiculous position has ended up dead …and their country in ruins….
    The latest challenge is coming from BRICS ….and between Ukraine, Syria and Turkey WRT Russia; …and the Zika thing WRT Brazil /Olympics 2016, it is clear that BRICS is under serious challenge too…

  5. NorthernObserver Avatar

    @DIW
    u might added Barbados to that list.
    My point….to make the comparisons between Bush’s final year and Obama today as they did, without referencing the additional Debt taken on, “skews” the VH posting.
    @David ‘The bottomline is that today’s price point is not sustainable.’
    Who told you that? The majority of producers can make money, the ‘sustainability’ is they wish to make more, because all else in their economies depends upon oil revenue. And for many, what else do they produce of value?


  6. @NortherObserver

    Can you explain what kind of margins are available for oil producers given production costs?

      OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) members Nigeria, Libya, and Venezuela have the highest total cost of producing crude oil. The total production cost is at $31.6 per barrel, $23.80 per barrel, and$23.50 per barrel, respectively.Jan 13, 2016

      Crude Oil’s Total Cost of Production Impacts Major Oil …

      marketrealist.com/…/crude-oils-total-costproduction-impacts-major-oilpro.


  7. https://www.cars.com/news/2016-Detroit-Auto-Show/?pageIndex=1

    What else do they (The United States) produce of value? The Boeing Company home based in Chicago, Illinois produces commercial airline jets that are sold to other countries all over the world. Another United States manufacturer, Lockheed-Martin home based in Burbank, California produces fighter jets and oh Detroit did you know is home of the United States automotive industry and additionally the annual North American Auto Show.


  8. http://www.secureenergy.org/policy/new-american-oil-boom

    US still producing lots of oil and still less dependent on the Middle East and Venezuela.


  9. A more accurate link to add value is this one:

    Saudi oil minister to face rival US shale producers as price rout bites

    Reuters

    February 21, 2016 Updated: February 21, 2016 04:17 PM

    Related

    This week, Saudi oil minister Ali Al Naimi will for the first time face the victims of his decision to keep oil pumps flowing despite a global glut: US shale oil producers struggling to survive the worst price crash in years.

    While soaring US shale output brought on by the hydraulic fracturing revolution contributed to oversupply, many blame the 70-per cent price collapse in the past 20 months primarily on Naimi, seen as the oil market’s most influential policymaker.

    During his keynote on Tuesday at the annual IHS CERAWeek conference in Houston, Naimi will be addressing US wildcatters and executives who are stuck in a zero sum game.

  10. NorthernObserver Avatar

    @LOOK
    I said “for many”, I was not referring to the USA, or Canada or Russia for that matter.
    @David
    pretty damn good margins if you are at the low end costs? If I gave you an opportunity where your costs were $10 and you could sell at $30, that is a 67% gross margin or a 200% mark-up? Even better if you could sell 1.5million units per day.

    Also don’t go willy nilly accepting such reports, because HOW all these various producers do accounting varies. If they include a $5/barrel state tax in the costs, what is the true cost? $10 or $5 oil +$5 tax. And they all ‘play games’ in how they account for the so-called fixed costs, especially if the set-up costs are provided by another state run or “friendly” operator.

    We know Canada, minus the oil sands, has many wells which produce waaaay under that $41 mentioned.


  11. http://www.antillean.org/moodys-downgrades-barbados/

    Barbados is in no position, has no right to be peeping in other people’s window – US, Canada, Russia, etc. You people on that island have far to many problems, So do this, mind your own damn business.


  12. You are right.
    That’s why Edward Snowden is my hero. And why Presidential candidate Trump told citizens to boycott Apple until they advise how to make their encryption key public. Bim can’t compete; other gov’t have a lock on the peeping title.


  13. http://www.eurweb.com/2011/03/minister-louis-farrakhan-says-rihanna-is-filthy-she-responds

    Other countries allow transparency and integrity and have in place Eminent Domain law and honor it. Owen Arthur, Mia Mottley, Dale Marshall, George Payne, etc. should be in jail. Again, as previously stated, you people on that island should just mind your own business. Edward Snowden, Donald Trump and The Apple Company is the United States business. You could though talk about that nasty filty Rihanna who admits to naughty naked selfies.

  14. NorthernObserver Avatar

    LOL…u see the moniker NORTHERN, do you think I LIVE in Barbados!!!! We are probably geographical neighbours.


  15. https://youtu.be/c5BL4RNFr58

    Northern Observer, we possibly are neighbors. My postings are Not directed to you specifically. LOL


  16. @LOOK

    Why don’t you go back under the rock you slithered from under? If Barbados means nothing to you why are you on the blog.


  17. @ David
    There we go with that ‘American’ attitude again from LOOK.
    Of course it is true that Barbados is full of problems, but shiite man, compared to the USA we are talking ‘Paradise’ here …just with a lot too much brass in the place…

    In fact, 98% of our problems and brass bowlery are a direct result of locals and ‘imports’ bringing the greedy, self-centred, materialistic and bombastic American ways to Bim…. all the bribery, graft, selfish ways…. even AC..(probably stands for ‘American C****)

    A perceptive traveller can actually ‘smell’ the materialistic selfishness in the air in LOOK’s precious USA. New York reeks of it, …and has the ‘smell’ of a doomed place…
    Admittedly, Barbados reeks of brass bowlery……but if only Caswell would BUP….


  18. Bush shit u ole scoundrel u are in no position to point moral fingers at govts in or out of this region.for sure you moral compass is in a dilapidated state of confusion


  19. Drunk driving in Barbados is legal, breathalyzers are not. That’s bullshit.


  20. https://youtu.be/lZD4ezDbbu4

    Bush Tea

    You just needed a REALITY CHECK. You too David. The very STRONG & POWERFUL USA vs. The HOPELESS little Barbados


  21. Democracy, such a funny word. http://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/the-untold-story-behind-saudi-arabia%e2%80%99s-41-year-us-debt-secret/ar-BBtRLGL?ocid=spartanntp

    There is that name again, kicking before the Second World War and still kicking, Brown Brothers Harriman, the investment firm that Prescott Bush used to be a principal of.

    Democracy… hmmm yeah…


  22. @Crusoe

    As if some of us who follow geopolitics have not suspected. It certainly explains US foreign policy as far at Saudi Arabia is concern.

The blogmaster invites you to join and add value to the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading