Story Created:
May 15, 2008
Story Updated:
May 15, 2008
Daniel Henninger notes that democracies tend to hold its leaders accountable for letting people die.
Bureaucracies anywhere are lumpen, but in nondemocracies their sloth can be lethal. Their political masters, in office in perpetuity, are often corrupt, and so too are they. This, not poverty, is mainly why buildings like the Juyuan Middle School collapsed this week. In Bam just five years ago, many died because they were trapped beneath crude houses. Cement up to code isn't that expensive.
Bad people and bad cement exist everywhere. When they kill people in a democracy, the pressure of public outrage calls for heads to roll. After the fiasco of Hurricane Katrina, the head of FEMA went to the block, George Bush's approval rating collapsed and has never recovered. Arguably, one can divide the Bush presidency's status to before and after Katrina.
Friday, May 16 at 7:15 PM Maddie - Saukville wrote ...
And good point Kurt. League of Nations? UN?
Friday, May 16 at 7:14 PM Maddie - Saukville wrote ...
Actually, we do. People are dying all the time. Tom Barrett wants to know where the gun came from. Drunk drivers with 17 convictions kill families-we sit by (still no real penalties). How about global? Darfor? We went into Bosnia but after how many died. Iraq-after how many died. A lot of people died in Vietnam because this democracy didnt have the stomach to finish the job. Im not saying America doesnt care (nobody does as much) but we do pick our battles. Lets not demagogue this one too much.
Thursday, May 15 at 12:22 PM Kurt/Elkhorn wrote ...
What will it take to get these Castroistic leaders to step up to the plate? Maybe a UN ambassador doing a Krueschev-shoe-pounding reenactment so the world will sit up & take notice. THAT might somewhere,but denial like Myanmar demonstrated is ridiculious.
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