I am at odds, fundamentally, with the system of government currently present in the United States. The reason we find corruption rampant in our government is because the system is flawed to its very core. The most powerful position in our government, if occupied by an ideal leader who knows right from wrong and acts upon it , would still be unable to work with and around those morally bankrupt and/or morons that occupy seats in Congress and the Senate.
I'm not making an argument for or against the Philosopher King, nor am I making an argument for or against democratic republics. I am explaining, more to remind myself than to inform anyone else, why I'm choosing to be a stuffy academic/professor/philosopher
I don't think that the United States is fixable. I think that the country is a lost cause. The American Empire, and yes, it is an empire, is in decline. Historians can show various parallels, for example, between the decline of the Roman Empire, and what is going on with the United States today. I think the argument is there, I think it is a strong one, and I accept it. The "greatest country on earth",
If, and this is a big if, in my academic career I can create and capture the elusive "right" system of government, the proper structuring of a system that deals with the application of morality in the political sphere, then I have done more than anyone could dream. This is my goal. Because when the United States falls, I want the people, the leaders who pick up the pieces, to put this system, if it exists, into practice. The chance of me actually writing something or thinking something truly worthwhile is miniscule. The chance of some people in the distant future reading my work, understanding it, agreeing with it, and implementing it properly is even less. But it is more than the lost cause that is saving the country of my birth.
Special thanks to the woman who inspired this post: Meryl Streep as horrible conservative, The Iron Lady, Margaret Thatcher
-Viv
Margaret Thatcher: Defeat? I do not recognise the meaning of the word.