Is mob rule actually mob rule? I think not
In todays mass media propaganda blitzed society peoples opinions and behaviors are largely not their own. The mob is directed by those who control the media and education systems.
hi Bay Area,
in a democracy, i would imagine so, yes.
if 9 people find the idea of lynching black people unsavory, and the 1 other person in the room really has a passion for it, i don't know what the fair solution is.
i guess the one guy could continue to hanging black people, but the other nine could refrain from it?
what if one of the nine people happens to be black, though?
- IGIT
hiya IDL,
i don't know what you wrote means, IDL.
the New York Times is mob rule? learning geometry and physics in high school is an example of mob rule?
- IGIT
Which is why we have a constitution with laws. Hanging people is against the law, no matter who wants it, or how many people favor it. Hanging people is a violation of our basic rights as citizens. We are supposed to be a constitutional republic, and NOT a democracy, or majority rule.
The new York times is just one end point of a larger network of media which is consolidated and controlled by very few people.
Physics and Geometry are neutral.
Social studies, history, and anything to do with values is used to shape peoples perception of the world.
hi Bay Area,
hanging black people, though, wasn't against the law for a long, long time. for a majority of this nation's history, actually.
it wasn't until 1968 when hanging black folks was criminalized in the Civil Rights Act. it wasn't seen as a violation of the basic rights of black americans until rather recently (if you take in the full historical arc of the United States).
it has since become illegal due to "mob rule", ignored were all the desires of the legions of Americans who enjoyed hanging blacks. the lynchers were totally discounted, and there many of them.
was this good or bad?
is mob rule good or bad?
- IGIT
hi all,
on several threads here in the War Room, the issue of mob rule comes up often - and its usually preceded by ominous intonations...the evils and perils of mob rule.
everytime this debate point comes up, i wonder if mob rule is a bad thing? is consensus and then acting on that consensus evil and inherently stifling to the American ethos of individualism?
when i look at the House of Representatives....that's mob rule. the each state is given an allotment of House members based on the population of the given state, so bigger states get a great deal of members.
the Senate? that is not mob rule. it's a place where a tiny left leaning state like Vermont gets as much say as the great state of Texas.
Presidential elections are also rife with the problem of mob rule. that means when Ronald Reagan absolutely demolished Walter Mondale in 1984, that was mob rule, right?
when civil rights were enacted in the sixties and the early seventies, surely many Americans were horrified with the idea of integrated schooling and anti-discriminatory workplace laws for women, yet it was forced down their throats by "mob rule". so is mob rule, then, a bad thing?
if there are ten of us in a room and need a degree of consensus if we are to co-exist, and nine of us agree on one way of doing things, but there is a lone holdout, should the nine of us bend to the will of the lone individual?
isn't voting on an issue to find the majority consensus inherently immoral, because if that's the route you take, you're also giving in to "mob rule"?
- IGIT
Well I would say that hanging of blacks was the sort of mob rule we are talking about. Hanging of blacks while practiced, was technically against the constitution since blacks were citizens at the time. And citizens are guaranteed life and liberty. So when this was rectified, we went back to the constitution, and not mob rule. The desires of the lynchers were discounted because the constitution protects citizens.
Mob rule= bad.
IGIT another way of putting it, is if you wanted to affect public opinion and shape culture into a desired mold how would you go about doing it?
China does it. Russia does. North Korea does. Do you think the same motives and means could possibly be at play elsewhere?
Mob rule is a pejorative description for direct democracy. The house and senate are representative democracy.
Either way rights will be violated unless powers in such systems are restricted.
Lately I'm favoring direct democracy more. Representative democracy is just an incremental improvement on monarchy, just as constitutional monarchy was an improvement on preceding monarchies.
hi IDL,
if i wanted a throttlehold on how public opinion is shaped, i'd just do away with the 1st amendment. that is what all tyrannical regimes fear; free speech.
do you have free speech? i know i do. i don't have unlimited funds to broadcast my particular version of free speech (like the Koch Brothers or Mr. Soros do), but i can say what i want.
- IGIT
hi Uchi,
mob rule and majority rule actually are the same thing, its just a different way of phrasing it.
to put it differently, when one doesn't like how the majority leans and legislates, it's described as "mob rule"....if you approve, it's "majority rule".
they are the same thing.
- IGIT
No they are not. One indicates an actual majority was arrived at when voting, the other does not. What if the mob are in the minority but rule by force? That would be mob rule as well.
Majority rule is when the majority rule, mob rule is ambiguous at best as to whether or not the majority rule.
to put it differently, is a mobster part of a majority or part of a group of other mobsters?
My point is people presume direct democracy would lead to demagoguery that violates rights and hence prefer a representative system. Whereas we actually need to restrict them either way.hiya James,
yep, no one would debate that mob rule is sort of a pejorative term. the House is a more pure representation of direct, proportional democracy, though...not so much the Senate.
any "power", both governmental and private, can violate rights unless there are checks and balances. i don't get what your point is here.
Personally I would buy up the media including the entertainment industry. Propaganda is amazingly advanced.
Monkey see, monkey do.
Dictators always seek to control the information that reaches the masses. The beauty in our system is that if it's privately owned, people just assume it isn't being used that way.
I think free speech will be eroded as time goes on. We can ourselves witness the expansion of what is considered politically correct and what isn't. I can only foresee that expanding.
No they are not. One indicates an actual majority was arrived at when voting, the other does not. What if the mob are in the minority but rule by force? That would be mob rule as well.
Majority rule is when the majority rule, mob rule is ambiguous at best as to whether or not the majority rule.
to put it differently, is a mobster part of a majority or part of a group of other mobsters?