http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2006-09-14T210107Z_01_L14100697_RTRUKOC_0_US-IRAQ-SADDAM.xml&archived=False
9/14/2006 7:38:25 PM
Probably nothing, unless you think one guy's opinion suddenly topples the definition of dictator.
9/14/2006 7:41:46 PM
One nonspecific guy, no.The judge of Saddam Hussein's genocide trial in Iraq? Perhaps.
9/14/2006 7:42:43 PM
Well let's get out a dictionary and a red marker and let him start to tell us whatever other subjective valuations he has.
9/14/2006 7:53:13 PM
So you disagree with his definition, then.
9/14/2006 7:54:47 PM
It would have been helpful if he explained what he meant. I don't know what he DOES define as a dictator.
9/14/2006 7:58:54 PM
Evidently, the people who surround a man play some hand in becoming one. We can deduce that. And it's obviously nothing intrinsic about a person either...[Edited on September 14, 2006 at 8:01 PM. Reason : ...]
9/14/2006 8:00:29 PM
It's not you, it's those other guys... no, really!
9/14/2006 8:01:01 PM
9/14/2006 8:03:37 PM
9/14/2006 8:06:01 PM
I think most people are intrinsically dictators, they just have to fight that urge when they become a leader (or to be come a leader). Bush excepted of course.
9/14/2006 8:11:51 PM
Gamecat I think you're an incredibly brilliant guy -- but when you latch onto things like this, I think you weaken your credibility. Pick your battles, in my opinion -- there are plenty of cases of the administration's incompetence, you shouldn't have to grasp at straws like this.
9/14/2006 8:13:04 PM
So, autocracy is instinctual in your view?
9/14/2006 8:13:30 PM
Yes, but it is usually trumped by thought/logic.
9/14/2006 8:16:53 PM
They cannot work together, in your view?
9/14/2006 8:20:27 PM
Theoretically yes, but the old adage "power corrupts" will hold true in practically 100% of cases.I think I would make a good dictator for example, because I won't become evil and greedy.[Edited on September 14, 2006 at 8:44 PM. Reason : ]
9/14/2006 8:43:43 PM
Ah, ye olde benevolent dictatorship.Why wouldn't it hold true in the cases where it wouldn't? You've admitted it's at least possible.
9/14/2006 8:50:32 PM
Actually, corporations are microcosms for dictatorships that work. Like Apple, for example, was started by and currently run by Steve Jobs, who by all accounts, was a tree-hugging hippie and a nerd (also a genius). His vision in life when he was starting Apple was largely to change the world for the better and probably also to make money. Plus, they supposedly have good employee benefits. So, they are run by someone who has a reason other than power for doing his job, the employees (like citizens) are mostly happy and well taken care of, and the customers view the product as worthwhile.Then you have cases like Enron, where the corrupt of the corporation grows so thick, they implode, taking a lot of people with them.The difference between the 2 companies is the leadership. The leadership of Enron in that case was probably after one thing, and one thing only: money. Where Jobs, as a hippie, was also motivated by changing the world for good. Google is another company with an Apple-esque vision and leadership.On a national level, that kind of synergy between the different forces on a country would be impossible to maintain, mostly because a large section of our country would be unwilling to compromise with other nations so that they view our "products" as worthwhile, which is necessary for the balance.[Edited on September 14, 2006 at 9:05 PM. Reason : ]
9/14/2006 9:01:47 PM
Exactly. So it looks like a benevolent dictatorship is at least theoretically possible, judging by our corporate examples like Apple.Here's where I think it may break down, though. At some basic level, another entity with a stick, has to be able to protect Apple while it's able to change the world for the better by employing people the proper way (in a way that gives them high morale). Why? Because Microsoft has it's own ideas. So does IBM. Not all of them align with Apple's vision.Without that entity with a stick, who prevents Microsoft and IBM from firebombing Steve Jobs' house? Who prevents corporate espionage between the companies? Who punishes corporate espionage between the two companies?---You sort of addressed some of the above, but I'll leave it anyway.
9/14/2006 9:05:55 PM
9/14/2006 9:18:03 PM
9/14/2006 9:23:18 PM
^^ That strikes me as a clear definition of why it'd be difficult, and probably unlikely to maintain. But not impossible. The Internet has the capacity to create a truly global culture, while preserving a locality's ability to preserve its independence. In other words, the Internet could unite the Tom Friedman's examples of the "Olive Tree and Lexus" in his famous essay on globalization.^ Amadeus?[Edited on September 14, 2006 at 9:45 PM. Reason : .]
9/14/2006 9:44:50 PM
yeah he's rightsaddam was such a nice caring leader... I even saw him on TV shaking hands and kissing babies
9/14/2006 9:47:02 PM
I disagree with the internet thing. It just makes the fall of 2 come more quickly. People on the internet, even though they are communicating from around the world, still disagree, even more bitterly, that people in meat-space.
9/14/2006 9:47:05 PM
They don't have to, though.And what's the "fall of 2?"[Edited on September 14, 2006 at 9:59 PM. Reason : ...]
9/14/2006 9:59:28 PM
Item 2 in the list I made, the divergence of peoples beliefs.Did you mean that people don't have to disagree? It's true, they don't, but they will. Literally every message board with a politics section (which is most of them) has copius amounts of disagreement. This, if anything, would help to resist a dictatorship.
9/14/2006 10:09:11 PM
9/14/2006 11:37:19 PM
I liked the other judge betterNo wonder the prosecution is asking for this guy to be removed[Edited on September 15, 2006 at 12:30 AM. Reason : 2]
9/15/2006 12:12:23 AM
Hmm. I don't like that at all.I don't like being suspicious of the interpreters working for our news services dicking around like that. Can you tell me, 0EPII1, if you know anyone who can translate Saddam's words independently? The fact that two different networks aired drastically different interpretations bothers me.
9/15/2006 1:05:39 AM
http://mediamatters.org/items/200610260010
10/27/2006 11:41:07 AM