Defence of True Democracy
By Buddhist Master Maitreya
In the capitalist civilization the acquisition of material wealth
appears to be a more important value than that of democracy. In fact,
governments often consider certain democratic practices as conspiratorial acts,
even performing a political, economic and cultural persecution towards those
who think differently and express themselves. This implies that the meaning of
true democracy is not simply the clean elections system which positions the governments
in the Power through overwhelming electoral triumphs, but rather it is the
exercise of ethical and socialist principles that are pro-democratic.
The Buddhist Spirituality defines democracy as a political,
economic and cultural system of Liberty that continually fights against the
perversion of Power. Thus, the metapolitical theory of Spirituality
discriminates the democratic ideals from mere electoral processes that are
periodic, competitive and open, because true democracy is not a guarantee of elections
but the direct intervention of the people in the programs and decisions of
government, thus overcoming the disadvantages and inequalities suffered by the
most oppressed individuals. Definitively, the spiritual master claims that
everything what does not comply with the values of Liberty, Equality and
Fraternity is not democratic. Suffrage and open elections are then the basic
starting point of democracy, but not its central aspect or legitimate core,
which is the agreement, responsibility and active participation in the
decision-making. A sufficiently democratic practice cannot be carried out every
two or four years and regardless what happens in between, but rather there must
be a constant control over those who are in Power on the part of the people.
For the Buddhist Spirituality, true democracy differs from illusion and
deception of electoral democracy, since it is not enough to win transparent
elections for holding a democratic legitimacy. To do this, they must be secured
the basic conditions of Liberty, Equality and Fraternity of the people during
interelectoral periods, by regulating the Executive Power through the
Legislative, Judicial, Journalistic and Popular powers. This implies that there
must be no prohibitions for the expression of society and there must be a free
circulation of information sources alternative to those of government, since
the questioning of the official version is a sign of democratic health. At the
same time, the Buddhist Spirituality supports the independency from each of the
State powers by protecting the fulfillment of peace, social justice and
human rights. Only the empire of the ethical law can protect the citizenry from
governmental oppression. Concordantly, the Free and Enlightened Being
(Arhat-Bodhisattva) discriminates the electoral origin of a government from the
democratic exercise, because while the former is a show of support, the second
is its legitimacy. Thus, true democracy is always a respect for the Human
Rights, rather than a dictatorship of the majority which thinks it can do
anything after having the electoral support. In this way, the Buddhist
Spirituality denounces the poor quality of democracy existing in many regimes
in the world, even criticizing many which have emerged from the popular vote.
The democratic quality is composed of the independent functioning of
government, justice and legislation, simultaneously guaranteeing the
control performed on the part of the citizenry through journalism and the
free critical expression, which allows executing public policies that
respond to the welfare of the people.
In the Buddhist Spirituality it is proposed true democracy that
has the ability to carry out elections regularly, not with the aim to elect
representatives but in order to participate in the decision-making at a
national and international level, because no ruler is more qualified than any
ordinary citizen. In this way, the spiritual master criticizes the democratic
legitimacy of many governments around the world, which lack a good democratic
exercise even though they meet the minimum legality requirements for obtaining
Power. The Buddhist Spirituality then qualifies a country as pseudodemocratic
in which the government or executive power directly or indirectly controls the
legislative and judicial powers and it performs a control or persecution on the
majority of mass media. In this sense, it is denounced that many countries with
a democratic electoral system lack a genuinely democratic exercise, by
deploying a brutal governmental power that resembles that of the monarchs or
dictators. Therefore, the mission of the Free and Enlightened Being
(Arhat-Bodhisattva) is fighting for the true democracy of all humanity,
denouncing the governmental deception and malfunctioning of justice in order to
bring Liberty, Equality and Fraternity to all the people.
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