Wednesday, August 3, 2016

US 2016 Presidential Elections: Donald ‘some-mothers-do-have-them’ Trump – A Threat To Democracy Everywhere?

by Eze Eluchie,

Under normal circumstances and in the true spirit of Democratic values and ethos, people are supposed and expected to make choices that are to their best interest. The unique selling point of Democracy, as a system of government over which several wars have been fought with thousands of lives lost and millions maimed, is that it offers people the opportunity to choose their leaders based on the fundamental believe that, all things being equal, people will go for leaders that add value to their lives and generally better their lot.

Likewise under normal circumstances and all things being equal, the United States had always been looked upon as the ‘bastion’ and ‘defender’ of democracy and democratic values, with several of its foreign policy and international military engagements carried out under the guise of fostering and deepening democracy. A country where democracy has repeatedly served to ensure the emergence of high quality leadership at any given time, serving to ensure great respect for the democratic process across the world, eliciting the admiration of friends and foes alike

Current events leading to the 2016 Presidential Elections in the United States have established that neither are circumstances normal nor are all things ever equal – that much has become clear with regards to the perception of democracy since the emergence of one hell of a queer character, the Donald ‘some-mothers-do-have-them’ Trump phenomenon on the scene of the US Presidential race. A phenomenon which to the amazement of all, including members of the Republican Party to which he has presently shifted his membership, scaled through a most thorough and rigorous Primary series to emerge the Candidate of the republican Party for the November 8 2016 Presidential elections.

That a character of doubtful stability (as chronicled by several high profile commentators in the US, inclusive of President Barack Obama, Senator Cruz, former Governor Jeb Bush and prominent members of the Republican Party and journalists) possessed of the catalogue of incredulity associated with Mr. Trump can scale through a democratic Primary process, clinch a ticket to contest for the US Presidency, with a probable chance of victory during the main elections and subsequent likelihood of being at the helms of the immense economic, social and military authority wielded across the world b the US, senders shivers down the spine of most objective observers of international affairs and serves to question the validity and integrity of popular franchise and democracy as a means of selecting political leaders. From Mr. Trumps mannerisms at his own campaigns rallies (such as asking those opposed to him to be punched and thrown out of the hall or thrown into the freezing cold without their jackets; to asking for a mother to be sent out on account of her crying baby; to repeated assurance to force an independent Mexico to foot the cost of building a wall along the US-Mexico borders; and palpable expressions of ignorance about real life issues and foreign affairs; the litany of absurdities exhibited by the Trump fellow is simply unending. And yet he emerged as winner in a democratic process@#?

If despite its over 200 years of continued governance under a democratic arrangement and a supposedly relatively enlightened populace, a Trump can still happen in the US, one can only feel sorry for the situation across most emerging States in the so-called global south which are pressurized into an all-comer electorate system where all and sundry irrespective of their knowledge and awareness of issues at stake are accorded the ‘right’ to vote – in some climes, a vote can be bought for as little as one single meal, thus leading to the emergence of all manners of sickos and weirdo’s as ‘democratically elected leader’. In one rather pathetic instance of the hypothesis propounded here, under the guise of ‘democracy’, Nigeria incredulously recently (s)elected, in a dubious process applauded by the main ‘custodians of democracy’ – the US and EU, an octogenarian tyrannical ex-dictator notorious for his inclination for ethnocentricism and religious bigotry to rule over a multi-ethnic and multi-religious state. Nigerian, neighbouring West African states and all in that perpetually ‘potentially great’ country are now living testaments to the horrors of ‘democracy’.

From a Sub-Saharan perspective concerned more particularly with how an outwardly engaging and militaristic US would have been quite aggressive in addressing the expansion of extremist Islamist jihadists across the region, one would have wished for a Trump victory come the Presidential elections, but when one totals up the enormity of the damage such a man will cause on virtually all other aspects of international affairs, and that it would be unfair to wish ill on a friendly and exceptional country, one can only hope the electorate in the United States do not wake up the morning after November 8th 2016 wondering what manner of harm they had just bequeathed on humanity.




Picture: US Republican Presidential Candidate, Donald Trump.


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