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Wisconsin: democracy or oligarchy?
Good column by Paul Krugman , who boils Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker's actions down to the power play that it is. (And isn't it funny to hear the Koch paid shills denounce free assembly and speech and protest by people who hold views different than the Koch-financed teabagger movement. A little democracy is a dangerous thing.) Krugman notes how Walker has worsened his state's situation by tax ...
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Haykakan Zhamanak: Armenian President pledged to put an end to oligarchy
President promised the West to end the oligarchy, singling out Samvel Aleksanyan and Ruben Hayrapetyan as next in turn after former Yerevan Mayor Gagik Beglaryan.
Krugman: GOP Gov. Leading America Down Road to 'Third-World ...
... and eventually, America - less of a functioning democracy and more of a third-world-style oligarchy....if America has become more oligarchic and ...
The oligarchy (from Greek ὀλιγαρχία, oligarkhía1) is a form of power structure in which power effectively rests with a small number of people. These people could be distinguished by royalty, wealth, family ties, corporate, or military control. The word oligarchy is from the Greek words "ὀλίγος" (olígos), "a few"2 and the verb "ἄρχω" (archo), "to rule, to govern, to command".3 Such states are often controlled by a few prominent families who pass their influence from one generation to the next.
Throughout history, some oligarchies have been tyrannical, relying on public servitude to exist, although others have been relatively benign. Aristotle pioneered the use of the term as a synonym for rule by the rich, for which the exact term is plutocracy, but oligarchy is not always a rule by wealth, as oligarchs can simply be a privileged group, and do not have to be connected by bloodlines as in a monarchy. Some city-states from ancient Greece were oligarchies.
Contents
1 Examples of oligarchies
2 Modern democracy as oligarchy
2.1 Corporate Oligarchy (Corporatocracy)
3 Athenian techniques to prevent the rise of oligarchy
4 See also
5 References
6 External links
Examples of oligarchies
People First: The latest in the watch on Ukrainian democracy
Highlights: The Ukrainian government and oligarchy seek to improve investment attractiveness and their reputation in the West, failing to appreciate the extent to which they are blemished by the national lack of democratic principles, freedoms and transparency.
Era and 20th century South Africa Apartheid period where privilege and power were in the hands of the local European descent who constituted only 20 of the total population Map of Sparta Impact on Society There are two types of oligarchy caste and elected oligarchy In the case of caste oligarchy is of inheritance This means
http://library.thinkquest.org/07aug/00540/oligarchy.html
American Oligarchy | Taylor Marsh – TaylorMarsh.com – News ...
Taylor Marsh is a national political writer, commentator and political analyst, writing on the web since 1996, Huffington Post contributor, progressive liberal.
Some examples include Vaishali, the French First Republic government under the Directory, and the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (only the nobility could vote). In the time of the ancient Greeks, Sparta was an oligarchy that clashed with the democratic city-state of Athens, (these two nations eventually clashed in the Peloponnesian war in which Sparta defeated Athens causing the city state to rule much of Greece for some time). A modern example of oligarchy could be seen in South Africa during the twentieth century. Here, the basic characteristics of oligarchy are particularly easy to observe, since the South African form of oligarchy was based on race. After the Second Boer War, a tacit agreement or understanding was reached between English- and Afrikaans-speaking whites. Together, they made up about twenty percent of the population, but this small percentage ruled the vast non-white and mixed-race population. Whites had access to virtually all the educational and trade opportunities, and they proceeded to deny this to the black majority even further than before.
Although this process had been going on since the mid-17th- 18th century, after 1948 it became official government policy and became known worldwide as apartheid. This lasted until the arrival of democracy in South Africa in 1994, punctuated by the transition to a democratically-elected government dominated by the black majority.
Miles Mogulescu: Wisconsin Is Ground Zero in America's New Uprising Against the Corporate Oligarchy
The one-sided class war by the corporate oligarchy against the middle and working class has, until now, been met by remarkably little resistance from the latter. But is all changing now in Wisconsin.
co opted and now they ve decided to tell you Dear Voter than you needn t concern yourself with these troublesome miscreants Big Media will make things simple for you by excluding them But wait a minute Isn t this a democracy Don t the voters decide who is voted off the proverbial island Well now you know better That is not the way America works America is run by a
http://weblog.timoregan.com/labels/elections.html
oligarchy: Definition from Answers.com
oligarchy n. , pl. , -chies . Government by a few, especially by a small faction of persons or families
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union on 31 December 1991, privately owned Russia-based multinational corporations, including producers of petroleum, natural gas, and metal have become oligarchs. Privatization allowed executives to amass phenomenal wealth and power almost overnight. In May 2004, the Russian edition of Forbes identified 36 of these oligarchs as being worth at least $1 billion.4
A well-known fictional oligarchy is represented by the Party in George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.
Another emerging oligarchy is the rule of Sri Lanka under the Rajapaksa family. The president, Mahinda Rajapaksa has nepotistically appointed hundreds of his family members into governmental postions. The Rajapaksa brothers are in direct control of the country's most powerful government institutions. A new contitutional amendment by the president has seen the elimination of presidential term limits. Minority tamil uprisings demanding equality has been militarily defeated with tens of thousands of civilians summarily executed after the last war. Dissenters, inclduing journalists, human rights advocates and politicians have been dissapeared or forced to flee the country.
Royals, princes of Harvard among Oscar front-runners
Tuesday, during the second annual Academy Award nominations panel at the Gene Siskel Film Center, Chicago Reader critic J.R. Jones observed, wittily, that the success of "The King's Speech" may have something to do with America — increasingly middle-classless America — drifting toward "an oligarchy," thereby encouraging a kind of nose-against-the-glass interest in the private lives of the royals.
Oligarchy - Definition and More from the Free Merriam-Webster ...
Definition of oligarchy from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary with audio pronunciations, thesaurus, Word of the Day, and word games.
Arguably North Korea is an oligarchy because the power descends from one family to another.
Modern democracy as oligarchy
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Main article: Iron law of oligarchy
Robert Michels believed that any political system eventually evolves into an oligarchy. He called this the iron law of oligarchy. According to this school of thought, modern democracies should be considered as oligarchies. In these systems, actual differences between viable political rivals are small, the oligarchic elite impose strict limits on what constitutes an acceptable and respectable political position, and politicians' careers depend heavily on unelected economic and media elites. Thus the popular phrase: there is only one political party, the incumbent party.
Corporate Oligarchy (Corporatocracy)
Corporate oligarchy is a form of power, governmental or operational, where such power effectively rests with a small, elite group of inside individuals, sometimes from a small group of educational institutions, or influential economic entities or devices, such as banks, commercial entities that act in complicity with, or at the whim of the oligarchy, often with little or no regard for constitutionally protected prerogative. Monopolies are sometimes granted to state-controlled entities, such as the Royal Charter granted to the East India Company, or privileged bargaining rights to unions (labor monopolies) with very partisan political interests.
Athenian techniques to prevent the rise of oligarchy
Senator vows to establish party if elected
SENATOR Shane Ross has vowed to establish a new political party if he gets elected to the Dáil.
Oligarchy | BoardGameGeek | BoardGameGeek
As a rule they have weird unpronounceable names, no connections into "oligarchy", and had next to no capital on arrival. Some of them were even Moslem. ...
Especially during the Fourth Century BC, after the restoration of democracy from oligarchical coups, the Athenians used the drawing of lots for selecting government officers in order to counteract what the Athenians acutely saw as a tendency toward oligarchy in government if a professional governing class were allowed to use their skills for their own benefit.5 They drew lots from large groups of adult volunteers as a selection technique for civil servants performing judicial, executive, and administrative functions (archai, boulē, and hēliastai).6 They even used lots for very important posts, such as judges and jurors in the political courts (nomothetai), which had the power to overrule the Assembly.7
See also
Government terms:
Aristocracy
Elitism
Crony capitalism
Democracy
Dictatorship
Form of government
Kleptocracy
Meritocracy
Netocracy
Oligopoly
Plutocracy
Political family
Theocracy
Timocracy
Power behind the throne
Russian oligarchs
Fascism
Anarchism
Relevant authors:
Vilfredo Pareto
Gaetano Mosca
Thomas R. Dye
Robert Michels
Plato
Webster Tarpley
References
^ ὀλιγαρχία, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus Digital Library
^ ὀλίγος, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus Digital Library
^ ἄρχω, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus Digital Library
^ http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/60263/marshall-i-goldman/putin-and-the-oligarchs, Putin and the Oligarchs, Foreign Affairs. November/December 2004
^ M.H. Hansen, The Athenian Democracy in the Age of Demosthenes 97, 308, et al. (Oxford, 1991)
^ Bernard Manin, Principles of Representative Government 11-24 (1997).
^ Bernard Manin, Principles of Representative Government 19-23 (1997).
Ostwald, M. Oligarchia: The Development of a Constitutional Form in Ancient Greece (Historia Einzelschirften; 144). Stuttgart: Steiner, 2000 (ISBN 3-515-07680-8).
External links
Online Text: Leonard Whibley, Greek Oligarchies: Their Character and Organisation (1869), still the only full-scale treatment of oligarchy in Classical Greece.
M Hollingsworth and S Lansley, Londongrad, From Russia With Cash, 2009, 4th Estate
v · d · eAuthoritarian forms of government
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Absolute monarchy · Benevolent dictatorship · Despotism · Dictatorship · Enlightened absolutism · Tyranny
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Fascism · Nazism · Communist state · Inverted totalitarianism · Theocracy · Totalitarian democracy
Other
Illiberal democracy · Military dictatorship · Military junta · Oligarchy · Single-party state · Police state (Counterintelligence state)
Wisconsin: democracy or oligarchy?
Good column by Paul Krugman, who boils Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s actions down to the power play that it is. (And isn’t it funny to hear the Koch paid shills denounce free assembly and speech and protest by people who hold views different than the Koch-financed teabagger movement. A little democracy is a dangerous thing.) Krugman [...]
What Is an Oligarchy?
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Oligarchy - New World Encyclopedia
In most classic oligarchies, governing elites were recruited ... Oligarchies have sometimes been synonymous with aristocracies, which were ruled by members of a noble class, ...
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