Sunday, September 12, 2010

Role of Government

Edited by Mwata Chisha

There is a set of good reasons why nations have government. Such reasons are as varied as the limitless needs and wants of nations. Imagining what one’s country would look like without a government conjures in one’s mind an image of a failed state. Human history is replete with examples of failed states. What has eluded many scholars is the point separates failed nations and those that have not. Researchers have created failed states indices. The interesting feature of indices is that they keep evolving, which makes tracking them a daunting task. Longitudinal studies that deal with changing combinations of variables requires that data be normalized to make between period comparisons possible. That leaves inquiring minds with one reasonable option; to find out if governments are performing according to expectations. If not, what are they doing instead.

It is important to understand why people opt to organize governments in the first place, it is important to go back in time to when societies began to notice their own inadequacies and therefore the need to have a small group of people to act as a governing body. How this body has taken shape in different societies is not the focus of this paper but whether the shapes they have taken has helped them perform according to expectations.

The Origin of the Concept of Government
For many thousands of centuries when people were hunter-gatherers and small scale farmers, humans lived in very small communities. The development of agriculture resulted in ever increasing population densities. David Christian explains how this helped result in states with laws and governments:

As farming populations gathered in denser and larger communities, interactions between different groups increased and the social pressure rose until, in a striking parallel with star formation, new structures suddenly appeared, together with a new level of complexity. Like stars, cities and states reorganize and energize the smaller objects within their gravitational field.

The exact moment and place that the erectional phenomenon of human government developed is lost in time. However, history does record the formations of very early governments. About 5,000 years ago, the first small city-states appeared. By the third to second millenniums BC, some of these had developed into larger governed areas: Sumer, Ancient Egypt, the Indus Valley Civilization, and the Yellow River Civilization.

As in David Christian’s analogy of star formation, there must have been a force or forces that made it necessary for people to congregate and organize government. David Christian further suggests that:

States formed as the results of a positive feedback loop where population growth results in increased information exchange which results in innovation which results in increased resources which results in further population growth. The role of cities in the feedback loop is important. Cities became the primary conduits for the dramatic increases in information exchange that allowed for large and densely packed populations to form, and because cities concentrated knowledge, they also ended up concentrating power. "Increasing population density in farming regions provided the demographic and physical raw materials used to construct the first cities and states, and increasing congestion provided much of the motivation for creating states.

It is fair to have expected David Christian to be specific about the incentives people perceived to cede power and control to a small group of people called government. Thomas Hobbes began to fill in for him with a somewhat specific reason when he stated:

...the fundamental purpose of government is the maintenance of basic security and public order...people were rational animals and thus saw submission to a government dominated by a sovereign as preferable to anarchy...people in a community create and submit to government for the purpose of establishing for themselves, safety and public order.

Hobbes, seems to be suggesting that safety and public order in the absence of a government would be difficult to maintain. What this means is that individuals in society are unable to maintain order and safety by themselves. Stated differently, there is a set of services that people cannot provide to themselves and public order and safety are among them.

In view of the foregoing, it is within reason to conclude that societies chose to form government to do for them what individuals could not do for themselves. On that basis, one would expect to see identical forms of government in every society. But that was not what happened. There were as many forms of government as there were societies. The known forms include:

• Anarchism - a political philosophy which considers the state to be unnecessary, harmful, or otherwise undesirable, and favors instead a stateless society
• Authoritarian – Authoritarian governments are characterized by an emphasis on the authority of the state in a republic or union. It is a political system controlled by nonelected rulers who usually permit some degree of individual freedom.
• Communism - Communism is a sociopolitical structure that aims for a classless and stateless society with the communal ownership of property.
• Constitutional monarchy – A government that has a monarch, but one whose powers are limited by law or by a formal constitution. Example: United Kingdom
• Constitutional republic – A government whose powers are limited by law or a formal constitution, and which is chosen by a vote amongst at least some sections of the populace (Ancient Sparta was in its own terms a republic, though most inhabitants were disenfranchised; The early United States was a republic, but the large numbers of slaves did not have the vote). Republics which exclude sections of the populace from participation will typically claim to represent all citizens (by defining people without the vote as "non-citizens").
• Democracy – Rule by a government (usually a Constitutional Republic or Constitutional Monarchy) chosen by election where most of the populace are enfranchised. The key distinction between a democracy and other forms of constitutional government is usually taken to be that the right to vote is not limited by a person's wealth or race (the main qualification for enfranchisement is usually having reached a certain age). A Democratic government is therefore one supported (at least at the time of the election) by a majority of the populace (provided the election was held fairly). A "majority" may be defined in different ways. There are many "power-sharing" (usually in countries where people mainly identify themselves by race or religion) or "electoral-college" or "constituency" systems where the government is not chosen by a simple one-vote-per-person headcount.
• Dictatorship – Rule by an individual who has full power over the country. The term may refer to a system where the Dictator came to power, and holds it, purely by force - but it also includes systems where the Dictator first came to power legitimately but then was able to amend the constitution so as to, in effect, gather all power for themselves. See also Autocracy and Stratocracy.
• Monarchy – Rule by an individual who has inherited the role and expects to bequeath it to their heir.
• Oligarchy – Rule by a small group of people who share similar interests or family relations.
• Plutocracy – A government composed of the wealthy class. Any of the forms of government listed here can be plutocracy. For instance, if all of the voted representatives in a republic are wealthy, then it is a republic and a plutocracy.
• Theocracy – Rule by a religious elite.
• Totalitarian – Totalitarian governments regulate nearly every aspect of public and private life.
• Legalism - A legalistic government enforces the law with rewards to those who obey the laws and harsh punishments to people who go against the law.
Some of the types seem more favorable than others. Yet, they are all formed by people from human societies. As reasonable and rational individuals, we would expect the favorable type of government to live up to its expectations; do for individual people in society that which they would be unable to do for themselves. But do they?

The heads of government are human beings, and given the human nature, what constitutes good governance has been a subject written about since the earliest known books. In the western tradition Plato wrote extensively on the question, most notably in The Republic. He (in the voice of Socrates) asked if the purpose of government was to help one's friends and hurt one's enemies, for example. Aristotle, Plato's student picked up the subject in his treatise on Politics. Many centuries later, John Locke addressed the question of abuse of power by writing on the importance of checks and balances to prevent or at least constrain abuse. It is believed that Thomas Jefferson was influenced by John Locke.

Most of the greatest atrocities committed against humans were planned and executed by or under the auspices of government. The most common ones include:

War
In the most basic sense, people of one nation will see the government of another nation as the enemy when the two nations are at war. For example, the people of Carthage saw the Roman government as the enemy during the Punic wars.

Enslavement
In early human history, the outcome of war for the vanquished was often enslavement. The enslaved people would not find it easy to see the conquering government as a friend. However, this is not true in every case.

Religious opposition
People with religious views opposed to the official state religion will have a greater tendency to view that government as their enemy. An example would be the condition of Roman Catholicism in England before the Catholic Emancipation. Protestants—who were politically dominant in England—used political, economic and social means to reduce the size and strength of Catholicism in England over the 16th to 18th centuries, and as a result, Catholics in England felt that their religion was being oppressed. North Korea provides a good contemporary example.

Class oppression
Whereas capitalists in a capitalist country may tend to see that nation's government positively, a class-conscious group of industrial workers—a proletariat—may see things very differently. If the proletariat wishes to take control of the nation's productive resources, and they are blocked in their endeavors by continuing adjustments in the law made by capitalists in the government, then the proletariat will come to see the government as their enemy—especially if the conflicts become violent.

The same situation can occur among peasants. The peasants in a country, e.g. Russia during the reign of Catherine the Great, may revolt against their landlords, only to find that their revolution is put down by government.

These are some of the things individuals in society would like to be protected from by the sophisticated thinking of those in government. Apparently individuals lack the wherewithal to maintain safety and order. Such maintenance of safety and public order should then require society to subscribe to certain values in order for it to produce a group of people who would do for the masses what individual members of society cannot do for themselves.

Common Thread
It is becoming increasingly apparent that people in government have forgotten why nations have adopted the concept government. Before they become part of the governing group, they speak forcefully about the issues that irk the masses. However, shortly after they occupy office, that voice of reason loses energy. It begins to sound like that of those that came before them; peddling empty promises during campaign rallies yet maintaining the status quo once re-elected. One cannot help but wonder what happens between the time speeches are delivered and when winners are handed keys to the office. It seems the planks begin to fall off the campaign platform in rapid succession. It seems also that people have become used to being lied to; they re-elect the same liars over and over. People who promised to solve their most pressing problems but did not deliver. These people are busy promoting the same ills that they are meant to protect the masses from. War, enslavement, religious opposition, class oppression, tribalism, racism, etc., are but a few avenues through which the government keep people veiled while they take for themselves.

Personally, I would not blame the government. Instead, I blame the people. I blame the public. I hip all blame on society. People in society are responsible for the ills they experience. By adopting the concept of government with a loose method of managing it, it has created a self-sustaining self-serving group of people called the government. Government is now perceived as the means to enrich oneself and in doing so, one shields those with whom one has joined hands to fleece the nation. This is not a western phenomenon neither is it eastern. Simply put, it is a human weakness that has rendered government a liability to nations. That being the case, the idea of government needs rethinking.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Rational thinker of the Week

Banda’s instruction to Undi amounts to corruption - Wina
By Patson Chilemba
The Post. Sun 05 Sep. 2010, 04:28 CAT


INONGE Wina yesterday said President Rupiah Banda’s instruction to newly-appointed Ministry of Finance permanent secretary Anthony Undi to implement the government projects in time for the 2011 elections amounts to corruption of the highest order.

Commenting on President Banda’s instruction to Undi, Wina, who is opposition Patriotic Front (PF) national chairperson, said the directive by the President amounted to corruption because the government had no genuine desire to develop the country until they realized that the elections were near.

He said the directive was a reactionary move to an impending election.
“I mean any leader should not be in a position to blackmail his or her people into submission. The people are free to choose.

They do not need to be blackmailed into voting for Mr Rupiah Banda because he has brought development to their area. I mean he has the responsibility as head of state to see that development is delivered,” Wina said. “I hope the people won’t be blackmailed. I hope Zambians will see through this and be able to distinguish between genuine development and some sort of induced development.”

Wina observed that President Banda did not have the capacity to plan for the nation’s development as evidenced by the last minute instructions to implement the government projects.

She said it was sad that development was being attached to the elections.
“They only react when it is time for elections, and this is retarding progress because instead of planning for the whole country, government will be planning projects to where elections are taking place,” Wina said.

“That way you can’t have a balanced development of the whole nation. And this is definitely corruption at its highest because people are being bribed. People are being told that ‘if you don’t vote we will not bring development to you’.”

Wina said professionalism in the civil service was being undermined by the ruling party because people were no longer appointed on the basis of their expertise but on their political affiliations to the MMD.

She also expressed concern that women were not being appointed to senior government positions as if there were no qualified women in the country
“It is a great pity, and it’s very, very regrettable,” said Wina.

During the swearing-in of Undi and new Commissioner of Prisons Percy Chato at State House last Friday, President Banda instructed Undi to implement government projects in time for the 2011 general elections.

All statements made by Wina are consistent with the areas of disagreement she had with Banda's directives. Wina did not attack Banda, surgically criticized what Banda said. It shows that she has no problem with the person of Banda but what the person uttered. This also can mean that Wina can be civil with Banda. There is a possibility that if Banda said or did something good, Wina would praise him. I would not put it past Wina that she would say a kind word or two if Banda announced that he would stop flying around in that presidential jet and attend to issues aching the nation. I know I would, even though I don't like Banda. Haa!

An Important Lesson People Choose not To Learn

This is an extract from Wonder Wall - 9/5/2010

Brad Pitt is so hot, it's illegal -- seriously! When Toyota featured the sexy star in an ad for the Altis in 2002, the Malaysian government ordered that the ads be pulled. Apparently, the sight of non-Asian faces plants "a sense of inferiority among Asians" -- at least that's what the country's deputy information minister, Zainuddin Maidin, explained at the time. My only question is: Does that mean the Jolie-Pitts won't be adopting any Malaysian babies?

But What Does The Image of A White Christ Does to Black African Babies?

Saturday, August 21, 2010

COMING SOON: titles of articles to be written by your host

Best Practices - Myth or Truth?

Can humans help the earth recover from environmental degradation?

Deciding to inherit one's rich culture.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Irrational thinker of the Week

ZAMBIA: TEARING A COPY OF THE DRAFT CONSTITUTION IN PUBLIC IS AN INSULT—NCC

THE National Constitutional Conference (NCC) has said the conduct of Patriotic Front (PF) deputy national secretary Samuel Mukupa to tear the Draft Constitution at a political rally is an insult to the many Zambians who have made submissions including Parliament.

And Mwense Patriotic Front (PF) Member of Parliament Jacob Chongo has said Mr Mukupa’s behaviour is also an insult to the United Party for National Development (UPND) their sister partner in the pact.

How does an expression of disagreement turn into an insult? If indeed it is an insult, what is the nature of the insult?

NCC spokesperson Mwangala Zaloumis said in an interview yesterday that it was wrong for the PF to politicise the constitution-making process.

“Zambians have been making submissions to the Draft Constitution and huge resources have been spent on this very important document therefore it would be wrong for people to politicise the process,” he said.

Ms Zaloumis said if people are opposed to the NCC process, they should not resort to politicising the constitution making process.

I thought the constitution itself was a political product. How does one politicize something that is already politicized?

She said the NCC was a creation of the National Assembly and that it was wrong for a member of the PF to conduct himself when parliamentarians from the party were party to the creation of the Act.

“PF members of Parliament were there when the NCC Act was created,” she said.

A creation of National Assembly or not, nothing prevents one from expressing disagreement with the contents of the document as it stood.

NCC chairperson Chifumu Banda refused to comment about Mr Mukupa’s behaviour because he had so much work to do.

“We have so much work to do because we have received a lot of submissions which Zambians have made, so I will not waste my time to comment on that behaviour,” he said.

That there were a lot of new submissions is justification for utter disagreement expressed by Mukupa. Submissions, in other words, are saying the same thing but in a more quiet way.

In a separate interview, Mr Chongo wondered how the PF and UPND would work together when they had such fundamental differences.

“That act by Mr Mukupa by itself is rubbishing all Zambians that have participated in the process including the UPND. They are telling the UPND that they do not think now just imagine how can these two parties work together. Are these really credible people that can form government?,” he said.

Holding dissenting views is actually healthy. It is a healthy organization that encourages generation of views alternative to the familiar.


“Do you have to go to such an extent if you do not agree with something? I think there are more civil ways that people can show disagreement.”

Chongo's failure to name one is indicative of scarcity of options.

He said by this act the PF were also rubbishing the Mung’omba Constitutional Review Commission (CRC) that the party has been advocating for.

“I only hope Zambians will now realise that these are criminals who want to usurp power by inciting people,” he said.

The Mwense MP also condemned the PF cadres for blocking Vice President George Kunda’s motorcade in Ndola.

“Just imagine what Mr Sata would have done if it was him that was blocked?” he said.
Mr Mukupa on Monday tore the Draft Constitution at a rally addressed by PF leader Michael Sata and threw it to the public saying the document was only fit for marketeers to use as a wrapper for vegetables.

[Times of Zambia]
August 6,2010

Final Note:
There is a hunger in most people, especially those privileged to moderate public discourse, to dictate what should or should not be appropriate conduct or the right thing to say. Many times they would rule one right or wrong without an explanation and when they happen to be so kind as to explain themselves, they fail to be rational. They tell somebody it is wrong to do or say something but they don't take time to explain why they think so. Subsequently, they stick a label on the other person and leave it at that.

A rational thinker evaluates other people's utterances before they make a response. They ask questions such as, 'What was wrong and what was right in what the person said?' They are always aware that no matter how thin a slice is, there are always two sides to it. 'What do I think the person missed and why do I think the person was right?' They remind themselves that there is always a chance that the other person was right and that possibility should given equal time. And lastly and more importantly, they ask, 'What is the weak area and what is the strong side of my judgment? What makes me think I am not as biased, one way or another, as the person whose comments I am evaluating?' This is not hard to do. All it requires is to listen, pause and think on what one hears or read an then respond when it is absolutely necessary.


And the title of Irrational Thinker of the Week goes to Zaloumis.

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Another Good Example of Irrational Thinking

Rupiah is a liar, charges Sejani
By Mwala Kalaluka in Luena
Wed 04 Aug. 2010, 04:01 CAT

RUPIAH is a liar, UPND chairperson for elections Ackson Sejani has charged.

And some Limulunga residents openly objected when UPND deputy chairperson for mines and minerals Namakau Kaingu urged them to give the candidate for the Alliance for Democracy and Development (ADD) in the Luena by-election, Charles Milupi, zero votes in Thursday’s poll.

During a well-attended public rally addressed by UPND leader Hakainde Hichilema at Limulunga Basic School on Monday, Sejani, who is also Mapatizya member of parliament, said President Banda was a liar who had taken thieves and plunderers into State House.

“Where I come from in Kalomo we have no time for thieves, we have no time for liars, we have no time for the MMD, we have no time for George Kunda, we have no time for Rupiah because they are liars,” Sejani told a cheering crowd. “The reason why late president Levy Mwanawasa was buried a decent man is because he attempted to put aside liars, plunderers and thieves. Rupiah Banda has brought plunderers and thieves into State House.”

Sejani then asked the crowd if they would tolerate thieves and liars to be in-charge of the country and the audience responded that they did not want such a situation.

“Don’t waste your time or your vote by voting for this useless government,” Sejani said. “How can you continue to vote for a useless government, which is not keeping its promises? In Mapatizya we will not vote for Rupiah Banda because he is a liar. It is only here in Luena where you can entertain a liar. He comes here, he stands here and you clap for him. In Kalomo we have no time for Rupiah because he is a bloody liar.”

Sejani urged the people of Luena to be very angry.

“I want you the people of Luena to be angry now, to be annoyed because they are fooling you. Are you going to vote for MMD on Thursday,” Sejani asked as the crowd gave a resounding, no.

Sejani urged Milupi to learn to be humble.

“Leading government is not a one man show. We need all of us,” said Sejani. “Politics is about being humble. Listen to advice from old people, young people, from everybody, you will be a better politician.”

And when Kaingu asked the crowd to give Milupi zero votes tomorrow, a section of the crowd immediately in front of the podium openly disagreed with her.

“Bo Milupi lubafe noto we should give zero to Milup),” said Kaingu.

A few seconds later the ADD’s rain falling slogan of ‘cuuuu’ emanated from some vantages within the crowd.

When the crowd was told to give the MMD and President Banda zero votes on Thursday, the crowd responded positively.

The situation compelled the masters of ceremony, Sibote Sibote to call on the UPND youths to take position and ensure that no one made ‘noises’ at the rally.

The campaign manager for the UPND in the by-election, Captain Walusiku Liambela said she was encouraged by the number of people that attended the rally.

UPND vice-president Francis Simenda said it was not true that some delegates from Western Province were beaten at the convention that saw the election of Hichilema as party president prior to the 2006 elections.

And addressing the crowd, an ecstatic Hichilema said the MMD was killing the people of Western Province through its failure to provide proper health services.

Hichilema said it was sad that at Limulunga Health Centre, patients and corpses were being carried on the same stretcher.

“The MMD has failed. The MMD has destroyed Zambia,” said Hichilema. “How can you have development in Luena when there is no road?”

All the five political parties contesting the Luena by-election have stepped up their campaigns ahead of the poll while the ECZ has engaged a chopper that is distributing electoral materials in the mostly hard-to-reach areas of the vast constituency.

The Post

Monday, August 2, 2010

Zambia: Sub-Saharan Jewel - A postive spin an African country rarely gets from the west!

Get as much out of Zambia as you put in
By Story by Hilary White and pictures by Bivan Saluseki
Sun 01 Aug. 2010, 04:01 CAT

IT is said that of all the continents, Africa has the power to run rings around your imagination. It calls to something deep within us that longs to go back and see where we all started.

But approaching the continent as a tourist can be daunting, especially if you only have a couple of weeks in which to visit. There is so much to consider squeezing in, and that's before you've looked at issues of safety and responsible tourism.

Enter Travel4change, which I recently had the pleasure of accompanying to the sub-Saharan jewel of Zambia. The Irish company has worked out that not everybody wants to go on holiday just to point at things and consume away in a nice climate. Some want to roll up their sleeves, leave their sweat and positivity behind, and make some small difference to the lives of their hosts.

Zambia makes this an easy prospect for the visitor. Happy and handsome, the people are a sea of bright smiles and good wishes. There is never a feeling that you should be looking over your shoulder. The Irish are particularly welcome, a brotherhood forged during independence in 1964, when Irish missions and government-aid schemes stepped in to help a fledgling nation find its feet.

And we're still there, too. In the capital Lusaka, we paid a visit to the Irish Embassy, where Ambassador Tony Cotter filled me in.

"This year, Irish Aid is celebrating its 30th anniversary here," he said.
"We are very involved in the education sector. In 1964, only six per cent of its population had completed primary education. Access to primary education is now more than 95 per cent. Ireland has made a significant contribution in that respect. Last year, we helped build 2, 500 classrooms and to recruit more than 5 000 teachers."

Travel4change is part of this legacy. Helmed by the vivacious and determined Marjorie McHenry, the company organises nine-day to two-week trips, depending on your budget. You work three days building a school, before winding south to enjoy the more customary fruits of Africa along the mighty Zambezi River.

What's more, the company donates 10 per cent of the cost of the trip to the project.

Lusaka was a welcoming place to commence. The climate was a dry, sunny and generally Paddy-pleasing 26 degrees. It was surprisingly green, with elegant tree-lined avenues and landscaped grass-verges. International banking, houses and construction sites hinted at a nation developing nicely in the face of the continent's economic, political and social challenges. Aspirations for it to become a middle-income economy by 2030 appeared reasonable.

Our base for these first days the Southern Sun Hotel, offered a high level of comfort. The restaurant put on an excellent buffet each evening - you could help yourself to Mediterranean tapas and an extensive salad selection before asking the chef to grill you a fillet of African fish. If by the end you couldn't bring yourself to approach the dessert table, the Southern Sun even had its own Irish bar, McGinty's, to adjourn to.

In the afternoon, a fitness room and outdoor pool were available to help work up an appetite. But despite the hotel's Western mould and level of service, there were continual reminders of being in Africa: crocodiles sunbathe in a pond beside the outdoor seating area, while you eat a breakfast of tropical fruit salad and good coffee; above them, in the lush reeds, hang the delicate basket nests of weaver birds.

Things were more explicit outside the Southern Sun during our daily drives into the Kanyama compound. The high-rise and traffic of downtown Lusaka would give way to the clamour and frenzy of the market area.

Lines and lines of vendors manned stalls selling anything and everything, while minibus touts leaned and leered out passenger windows.

It's safe to say that our five pasty northern European hides stood out, but bar the odd "mzungu" (white man) heckle, we would get wave after smile after wave.

The tarmac road finally came to an end and continued as a bumpy track of dust and rock. This was Kanyama, a vast suburb home to some of the city's poorer residents. We continued on, resting finally by the large clearing that would one day be the Luyando Open Orphanage Community School.

There are about 1,800 HIV/AIDS orphans here, and while conditions in the area are comparatively better than in many other African townships - community spirit and housing structures are both sturdy - it is these children, their parents ravaged by illness, that Travel4change is setting its sights on.

During the next three days, our group worked in the dust and sun to scratch out what would soon be the construction site. Supervising work on the project was Hibernia Contracting, which, as the name would suggest, was an Irish-owned business.

The owner in question was a hard-nosed but helpful Dub by the name of Mark Brogan, who, incidentally, had also set a new standard in fundraising as chairman of Zambia's Wild Geese - the expatriate Irish community there.

Third World bureaucracies tend to get things done very slowly, however, and some teething problems emerged over property rights. This meant lots of phone calls and negotiating on Marjorie's part, while the rest of us helped clear away foliage and rubble.

It was satisfying outdoor work, the kind you wish you got more of. Sweat emulsified with sun-cream, running into and stinging my eyes. Dust travelled up noses and prompted bouts of sneezing. Hands were blistered and thorns snagged skin.

But all around, young and old came to shake your hand or help you carry a tree stump away.

This was going to be theirs and they understood this. We weren't heroes - merely assistants to a better start for these children.

Travel4Change organises responsible tourism that will have a positive impact on the local communities. The next trip is planned for November. For more details, visit www.travel4change.

The Post