Submitted by phileconomicus t3_zk0fac in philosophy
dsdsds t1_izx639g wrote
The author might have a point if all public protests are a reaction to democratic votes, but most public protests are against political or private interests that could never be addressed by democracy. January 6th and associated trucker disruptions might be the only example in the US I can think of. Even saying that political decisions by elected officials are democracy, but consider that politicians misrepresent themselves all the time, or there are new influences after the election that affect decisions.
iiioiia t1_izy3w9v wrote
> but most public protests are against political or private interests that could never be addressed by democracy.
I think they could be addressed by legitimate democracy, but I can certainly agree that they are not addressed by our democracy theatre (that we refer to colloquially and ambiguously as "democracy", as if the word is a binary).
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