Democracy and Supragentilic Societies

 


The promotion of ideological groups alternative to the State is one of the driving forces of postmodern democracy, aimed at the disintegration and weakening of the State as an autonomous political unit. This disintegration of the State, as we know it since the Renaissance, does not occur in the name of anarchy but in the name of a superior order of organization imposed upon the political configuration of the State itself. The design of a "world government" responsible for the political globalization of the planet is evident.

The democratic State thus becomes a weak, fragmented, and postmodern State, whose disintegration and anemia will always be oriented toward favoring the economic interests of this superior group, or transnational estate, financially organized with aspirations for global and planetary management. This trend is not original, as it has recurred periodically throughout history. It's not new at all. What's original, in each case, are the means through which this will of globalization is implanted in every historical period, as each era results from specific advancements utilized in all aspects of life — health, education, beliefs — and, of course, in politics and economy.

The strength of democracy today is measured by the fragmented weakness of the State, so that a democratic State won't be a strong one but a very weak, decentralized, and unequal one, and consequently unjust, given its legal imbalances, oriented not towards defending the interests of different human and social groups, as we are led to believe, but towards dominant economic groups as...

 

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