Sublime
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Francis Fukuyama • The Origins of Political Order
À la Commission trilatérale mise en place par David Rockefeller en 1973, les experts se succédèrent pour poser un constat alarmé sur une situation jugée ingérable : les gouvernants peinaient désormais face à l’implication des gouvernés. On y évoquait de supposés « excès de démocratie » et des luttes pour l’égalité. Trop de démocratie allait briser
... See moreLudivine Bantigny • Révolution (French Edition)
Shils peut être considéré comme l’inventeur de ce sens étendu du terme de populisme, et sur ce point sa postérité est immense. Il propose une première fois cette nouvelle acception dans un texte paru en 195435, puis dans The Torment of Secrecy deux ans plus tard : Le populisme, bien qu’il soit considéré comme un phénomène issu principalement du Mid
... See moreAntoine Chollet • L'antipopulisme ou la nouvelle haine de la démocratie (French Edition)
But I do not think that a democratic power is naturally without force or without resources: say, rather, that it is almost always by the abuse of its force and the misemployment of its resources that a democratic government fails. Anarchy is almost always produced by its tyranny or its mistakes, but not by its want of strength.
Alexis de Tocqueville • Democracy in America, Volume I and II (Optimized for Kindle)
Democracy is based on Abraham Lincoln’s principle that “you can fool all the people some of the time, and some people all of the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time.” If a government is corrupt and fails to improve people’s lives, enough citizens will eventually realize this and replace the government. But government control of th
... See moreYuval Noah Harari • 21 Lessons for the 21st Century
If the altered demographic profile of the two parties in the 2016 election—almost perfectly replicated in the 2018, 2020, and 2022 elections—is signaling America’s newest political realignment, it would be the first since the Nixon-Reagan elections of 1968 to 1980, roughly forty to fifty years earlier. By Walter Dean Burnham’s count (as we saw in C
... See moreNeil Howe • The Fourth Turning Is Here: What the Seasons of History Tell Us about How and When This Crisis Will End
Cicero reflects exactly that when he sums up Servius Tullius’ political objectives in approving tones: ‘He divided the people in this way to ensure that voting power was under the control not of the rabble but of the wealthy, and he saw to it that the greatest number did not have the greatest power – a principle that we should always stand by in po
... See moreMary Beard • SPQR
Or le seul et unique point commun des mouvements que la science politique (et les médias, à sa suite d’abord, puis la précédant) désigne comme « populistes » est la menace qu’ils ont tous fait peser sur les partis politiques traditionnels sur leur propre terrain, à savoir celui des élections.
Antoine Chollet • L'antipopulisme ou la nouvelle haine de la démocratie (French Edition)
The more precarious and the more perilous the position of a people becomes, the more absolute is the want of a fixed and consistent external policy, and the more dangerous does the elective system of the Chief Magistrate become.