Archive for the ‘Democracy’ Category

How much time will we invest in democracy? | Opinion – NJ.com

In recent years there has been a lot of speculation about democracy and our system of government. Much of it centers on whether our system can survive and whether or not were ripe for being taken over by some kind of strong-arm dictator type. Given what weve seen the last few years and how some people have acted, there is reason for worry and concern.

I have this view because democracys underlying working assumption is that we, the people will do our part. I dont just mean showing up and voting, although that is a good place to start, but doing the mental and intellectual work required to allow democracy to function. The simple question to be answered is: How much time and effort are we willing to give to democracy?

Dont miss the best in editorials, opinion columns and commentary from NJ.com writers. Add your email here:

For many, the time theyre willing to give is confined to voting. Much like C and E Christians those for whom religion means popping into church on Christmas and Easter their involvement is basically limited to every four years when a presidential election comes along. Others might participate a bit more frequently, in mid-term and gubernatorial elections. An even smaller subset of people will turn out to vote in local elections.

Participation through voting, however often one exercises that right, is the minimum we should expect from ourselves and our fellow citizens. Even this basic expectation comes with conditions. For example, you often hear people say, either with pride or contempt, that theyre not going to vote because they dont like any of the candidates as if elections were beauty contests. Others dismiss the whole thing out of hand by claiming Theyre all crooks.

There certainly have been crooks at all levels of government and there will be more in the future, but there are also some incredibly smart and hard-working people trying to accomplish important things. This is always difficult and time consuming in a democracy.

I wonder if it ever occurs to those who dismiss the system as rigged or who scorn everyone in office as crooked that things might get better if they, themselves, invested more time participating in our democracy. I have to believe that these are honest people, folks with integrity, who have to know it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy if they leave the playing field all to the crooks.

I would also suggest that beyond the simple act of voting, people who do so should have a basic working knowledge and awareness of the issues at hand. Without that, a voter cant evaluate effectively the plans and intentions of those seeking office and thus, no way to hold accountable those who are elected. Whats left becomes a personality contest, and the choices are the equivalent of voting for a brand: Are you a Chevy guy or a Ford guy?

Of all the levels of government, local government is the one that is most neglected and least likely to prompt public engagement. Its obvious that only a fraction of eligible voters show up when a municipal election tops a ballot. Yet, much of what occurs in local government has a direct and daily impact on peoples lives.

Beyond that, its also extremely difficult and frustrating to get people to serve on various boards and commissions that exercise power outside a towns main governing body. This occurs with zoning boards, planning boards and library boards, to name a few. For better or worse, some real governing takes place on these local bodies. Its hard to find appointees, who, once they agree to serve, will faithfully attend meetings, take time to become informed on the subject matter at hand, and render decisions for their fellow citizens. The criteria for board members has to be more than simply being able to fog up a mirror.

We are blessed to have the system we have; it didnt just drop out of the sky. We ask a lot of our system, that it give us freedom and power and equality and a voice and choices. Yet, how much time are we willing to give to democracy?

Albert B. Kelly is mayor of Bridgeton. Contact him by phone at 856-455-3230 Ext. 200.

Our journalism needs your support. Please subscribe today to NJ.com.

Send a letter to the editor of South Jersey Times at sjletters@njadvancemedia.com

Bookmark NJ.com/Opinion. Follow on Twitter @NJ_Opinion and find NJ.com Opinion on Facebook.

Visit link:
How much time will we invest in democracy? | Opinion - NJ.com

Salman Rushdies grave fears for Indian democracy published in PEN anthology – The Guardian

Salman Rushdie signed a letter expressing grave concerns about the rapidly worsening situation for human rights in India and contributed a short piece to a collection about India at 75 before he was stabbed on stage at an event in New York.

The writer was one of 102 signatories to the PEN America letter to Droupadi Murmu, who has served as Indias president since July. The letter, dated 14 August, was sent to coincide with the 75th anniversary on 15 August of Indias independence from British rule.

The letter says: We write to express our grave concern regarding the myriad threats to free expression and other core rights that have been building steadily in recent years, since the Bharatiya Janata party-led government has come to power.

We urge you to support the democratic ideals promoting and protecting free expression in the spirit of Indias independence, and restore Indias reputation as an inclusive, secular, multi-ethnic and -religious democracy where writers can express dissenting or critical views without threat of detention, investigation, physical attacks or retaliation.

Other writers who signed the letter include Ayad Akhtar, Kiran Desai, JM Coetzee, Elif Shafak, Colm Tibn and Anne Tyler.

Rushdie, who was born in India, remains in hospital after Fridays attack at a literary festival, but has been removed from a ventilator. The man suspected of attacking him, Hadi Matar, pleaded not guilty at the weekend to charges of attempted murder and assault at a brief court appearance where he was denied bail.

In addition to signing the letter, Rushdie also contributed to PEN Americas India at 75, a collection of short writings by authors from India and the Indian diaspora. The collection asked writers to express what they felt in response to an acceleration of threats against free speech, academic freedom and digital rights, and an uptick in online trolling and harassment since the 2014 Indian election.

The collection records ideas of what India was and ought to be, and what it has become.

Rushdies contribution was written before the attack on him, said PEN America.

In the short piece, Rushdie reflects on the collective history of Hindustan Humara, translated as our India, when we celebrated one anothers festivals, and believed, or almost believed, that all of the lands multifariousness belonged to all of us.

But, he goes on to write, that dream of fellowship and liberty is dead, or close to death and, calling on imagery from JRR Tolkiens The Lord of the Rings, the Ruling Ring one might say has been forged in the fire of an Indian Mount Doom.

Other writers in the India at 75 collection include Angela Saini, Hari Kunzru and Preti Taneja.

Then, in the First Age of Hindustan Hamara, our India, we celebrated one anothers festivals, and believed, or almost believed, that all of the lands multifariousness belonged to all of us. Now that dream of fellowship and liberty is dead, or close to death. A shadow lies upon the country we loved so deeply. Hindustan isnt hamara any more. The Ruling Ring one might say has been forged in the fire of an Indian Mount Doom. Can any new fellowship be created to stand against it?

Salman Rushdie was born in Bombay and lives in New York. He is the author of 20 books, including Midnights Children. His many international honours include the Booker Prize, the Best of Booker Prize, Companion of honor (UK), PEN Pinter prize, PEN/Allen lifetime achievement award (US), and EUs Aristeion prize, among others.

Because I was born and raised outside of India, India, in its absence, took on even greater significance in my mind. I grew up with parents who, in missing India, sought out other Indians, and so my notion of an Indian community was always diverse. When they invited other Indian families to our home, in the small Rhode Island town where I was raised, I realised that India was an elastic container of individuals who spoke, ate, dressed, and prayed in different ways. These differences did not enrich an otherwise homogeneous India; they were India. In that sense, India seemed light years ahead of the United States, which was a melting pot in name but alienating and provincial in practice, at least from my perspective. Visits to Kolkata, a city that, as my mother liked to point out, welcomed all of Indias populations, only confirmed my perception that Indias relationship with the Other was built into its very fabric. The plurilingual aspect of India, in particular, both inspired and consoled me, for it insisted on the need for ongoing communication and translation. The co-existence of more than one language generates curiosity, calls for interpretation, and subverts any notion of absolute power. Unravel certain threads, or snip some strands away, and the conversation is lost; we are left with a frayed society, with imposed silence, with banal and baleful notions of nationhood.

Jhumpa Lahiri was born in London and grew up in the US to Bengali parents. She won the Pulitzer prize for her debut short story collection, Interpreter of Maladies, and is the author of three novels, including, most recently, Whereabouts, and two collections of short stories. She writes in English and Italian.

Earthworms in Masks

The time was my childhood. Till recently it did not feel so very long ago, but, suddenly now, it does. Not because I have come a long way but because I feel I might be near the end!

In that childhood would come a rare sound, a whirring, in the skies, in those days quite blue still. We would rush outdoors and look up. A machine with wings, flying far far above, flying far far away. To lands remote. To lands longed for. To lands never to be reached.

Hawaijahaz hawaijahaz, we children would shout.

It was no whirring. It was stirring of our dreams and longings.

Today. A whirr in the skies. The whirring as rare as in my childhood. The skies as blue. I dont rush out but go with some weariness to the window, or to the balcony, my access to the outside during lockdown. I look up, a wee bit sadly, longing somewhat still, but dreams feeling a bit quashed. It is the same machine with wings, flying far far above, flying far far away, to places which had all come in my reach, but, may have gone out of my reach forever and ever.

There was magic when the horizon was far. Possibilities were the stuff of dreams.

But man was fast and confident and driven. He forged ahead. Became too fast, overconfident, ruthlessly ambitious.

The collateral effects were to my pleasure. I got on to planes and crossed the horizon. I wandered in unknown lands. Dreams became reality.

Everything became possible. Everything opened up. Everything lay under me. The trees of my childhood which gave shade to my house were now trees over which my house in a multistorey towered.

Man, the master of all, friend to none.

In the market. In global competition. In barrier-crossing. In the country, in the countryside, in the centre, in the margins, in the skies and the waters and ready to be so in space too.

We shook up everything and felt good about it. I did too as I am the collateral beneficiary of this glittery, overhyped, overactive world. Ever increasing our pace.

But shaking up everything meant Everything moved.

That Everything was alive. We were not making an inanimate world move. We were shaking up the Animate. Earth. Air. Water. Planets. Mountains. Worms.

Warnings came. Everything is shaking and us too with it and it will speed up. Speed thrills but also kills. But we believed in our immortality.

It struck. The virus.

In a flood a scorpion climbed up a swimmers shoulder and was being safely ferried across. Midway it stung its saviour, the very being saving it. But the scorpion was innocent. Stinging was its Dharma.

So too the virus. It was merely fulfilling its Dharma to leap borders and infect bodies.

Innocent.

But man? His Dharma?

And what of me, willy-nilly part of that erring man?

How now and how much to slow down after getting addicted to speed? After flying galore, rending apart the atmosphere, how, and how much, to fold up my wings?

The world had to run at our behest. We were not going to be dictated by a virus. We planned on gagging others, not ourselves.

So are we the aliens and robots we thought we will make of you and control? Hey you, in front of me, behind that mask and in that three piece protective suit, are you human? Am I? No smile. No hug, kiss, touch, love!

Move over humans, for the aliens and the Robots are upon us and are we them!

I was sure I will escape even if you cant!

There was this earthworm which raised its head from the mud and stared at the disaster all around. He saw another earthworm doing the same. And said to the other you stay stuck here, I am leaving for happier pastures.

At which the second earthworm replied idiot, we are linked, I am your other end! Where I stay there you do too, where you go there go I. But where is there to go?

Here, he said, as if resolving anything, take this mask!

So no place to go and anyway planes are not flying and when they do it is not safe and us a bunch of earthworms, some heads, some tails, all in the same mess of overkill and overreach. In masks.

That was then. Indeed planes are flying again and there we are flying in them as jubilantly as before. No slowing down, no reflecting on lessons to be learned, improving the world, we confidently believe again.

Gandhi was not such a madman after all!

Geetanjali Shree lives in Delhi and writes in Hindi. She wrote this piece in Hindi and translated it. She is the author of five novels, including Ret Samadhi (Tomb of Sand, translated by Daisy Rockwell) which won the International Booker prize in 2022. She has also written five collections of short stories. She is one of the founding members of a theatre group, Vivadi.

Original post:
Salman Rushdies grave fears for Indian democracy published in PEN anthology - The Guardian

Democratic Member Richard Tsoi Released From Prison, Believes Democracy Will Return – The Epoch Times

Richard Tsoi Yiu-cheong, age 54, a Hong Kong politician, was released from jail on Aug. 13. He was arrested in September 2021 for incitement and participation in an unauthorized 2020 June 4th assembly.

Tsoi was the former vice-chair of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China, which was a pro-democracy organization formed on May 21, 1989, in the then British colonial era of Hong Kong. It was formed at the time of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre in Beijing.

The Alliance was disbanded by September 2021. The then chairperson Lee Cheuk-can, vice chairperson Chow Hing-tung, and Ho Chun-yan were arrested in September 2021 for inciting subversion of state power under the Hong Kong national security law.

Tsoi served as a member of the Alliance since 2004 when he was studying at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and assisted the Student Union in supporting the 89 Democracy Movement. He then resigned together with half of the members for safety reasons in July 2021.

A month later, the National Security Department of Hong Kong Force accused the Alliance of collusion with foreign forces and asked for the submission of documents. The Alliance rejected the police request, saying that the charge of being a foreign agent had not been explained and had no legal basis.

Around 10:00 a.m. on Aug. 13, several democratic friends were present with flowers to greet Tsoi in Tung Chung, including Leung Kam-wai, a member of the Alliance, Lo Kin-hei, chairperson of the Democratic Party, democratic member Emily Lau Wai-hing, Cheun Man-kong, Kelvin Sin Cheuk-nam, and Leung Yiu-chung.

Tsoi said he could not have the annual candlelight vigil for June 4 Massacre in Victoria park while he was in jail. Still, he observed a moment of silence and sang songs of the Democracy Movement: Flower of Freedom and Democracy will Triumph and Return.

He said there are lots of difficulties nowadays in Hong Kong, and the city has experienced significant changes in recent years, but he believed Hongkongers would never forget why they started their mission, and he is confident that it can be accomplished.

Tsoi told the media that he was working pasting envelopes in prison. He did some exciting reading. He lost six kilograms and was now able to do 100 push-ups. In prison, he has been learning about the current affairs of Hong Kong through newspapers and radio.

He says the days were hard in prison, with severe cold and hot weather, and he felt very miserable. The condition of the environment and facilities in the jail need to improve, he believed that it is already a punishment to be locked up, and there should not be other inappropriate treatment.

Though the local and the world situation is becoming more and more complicated, he still believes the democracy will return from victory.

Tsoi has no intention to leave Hong Kong and will devote time to work and focus on local peoples livelihood and grassroots issues, especially on the rights and interests of prisoners.

Follow

Originally posted here:
Democratic Member Richard Tsoi Released From Prison, Believes Democracy Will Return - The Epoch Times

Letter: Choose democracy and the common good – Concord Monitor

Published: 8/15/2022 7:03:30 AM

Modified: 8/15/2022 7:00:02 AM

I write in response to Daniel Leclairs letter (Monitor, 8/7) Why the common good is bad. Mr. Leclair equates the common good with collectivism, Communism and Socialism, summoning Cold War bogeymen to attack a high ideal. Proponents of the common good are not the enemy, nor do they lead to more division and hate. Lets start with President Woodrow Wilson: There is no higher religion than human service. To work for the common good is the greatest creed. That certainly includes our military, teachers, police, firefighters, and health care workers, all of whom work tirelessly for the common good.

Then theres Saul Alinsky: People cannot be free unless they are willing to sacrifice some of their interests to guarantee the freedom of others. The price of democracy is the ongoing pursuit of the common good by all the people. People who got immunized and wore masks to protect themselves and others from COVID are to be praised for supporting the common good. Its estimated that 20-30% of Americas one million COVID deaths couldve been prevented if the common good had been prioritized over individual freedom. When people advocate for national action on climate change and back that up by making personal sacrifices to reduce their carbon footprint, theyre serving the common good, including for generations to come. As an independent voter, I salute the Democratic Partys commitment to the common good and wonder why the Republican Party demonstrates such a consistent lack of compassion.

Allan MacDonald

New London

Continue reading here:
Letter: Choose democracy and the common good - Concord Monitor

Black media owner: We won’t have true democracy until there’s enough diversity in ownership’ of media – Fox News

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

TheGrio owner Byron Allen attacked the lack of diversity in media ownership as stifling "true democracy" while appearing on CNNs "Reliable Sources" on Sunday.

The Black media owner appeared a few weeks after it was announced that his company was acquiring the Black News Channel. Now rebranded as a section of TheGrio, the channel will mark a way to expand Black media, Allen claimed.

"We want it to be more inclusive. I never thought it was a good idea - a Black News Channel. I dont think we need the Black News Channel. I think we need a good news channel, a terrific news channel like yours. So the network is going to be a lot more inclusive. It will be far more focused on lifestyle, entertainment, news and sports," Allen said.

Host Brian Stelter quickly pointed out the unique position Allen is in as a Black media company owner.

The CNN building in Atlanta, Georgia. (Getty Images)

RNCS PARIS DENNARD: LIBERAL MEDIA THREATENED BY BLACK, MINORITY REPUBLICANS

"Talking about learning, what have you learned over the years in the media industry which is, lets be frank, mostly White male-controlled media industry, all the media titans. You have been buying up properties. What have you learned over the years doing so?" Stelter asked.

"We dont have enough diversity in ownership. We dont have a real democracy until people really own these assets. Women dont own these networks and they dont control their image and their likeness and how theyre produced and depicted. Asian people are pretty much nonexistent in the media landscape in terms of how were depicting them and seeing the Spanish networks owned by people who dont even speak Spanish and gay people dont own their networks as well as African Americans," Allen answered.

He reiterated, "We need to own our networks, control the narrative, control how were produced and depicted and seen around the world. Until all of our voices are heard, then we dont have a true democracy."

TheGrio owner Byron Allen appeared on CNN's "Reliable Sources" (CNN)

MSNBCS TIFFANY CROSS SLAMS MAINSTREAM MEDIA OPTIMISM ON ECONOMY, AINT DOING BETTER FOR MINORITIES

Black media pundits have appeared to agree with Allens sentiment. MSNBC host Tiffany Cross called out fellow mainstream media members for failing to properly relate to a minority audience.

"A part of the challenges I have in the mainstream media, and you hear things like, Oh the economy is doing better. And for many of us, the economy is not the stock market. It aint doing better for us," Cross said on Saturday.

Brian Stelter has a long history of skipping the most talked-about stories regarding the mainstream media.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

She added, "And so when you have these conversations, it sometimes feels like such a disconnect between us and the community, we feel left out of the conversation."

Fox News Gabriel Hays contributed to this report.

Lindsay Kornick is an associate editor for Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to lindsay.kornick@fox.com and on Twitter: @lmkornick.

Read the original:
Black media owner: We won't have true democracy until there's enough diversity in ownership' of media - Fox News