Social Democracy
The Current Worldwide Political
Renaissance
Stes de Necker
INTRODUCTION
If there can be
one positive result from the current spade of armed conflicts around the world,
it is that majority of the world’s nations are getting much more politically
activated, politically conscious and politically interactive.
Personal safety
and security, mutual cultural respect, religious tolerance and economic
development, have created an unprecedented interest in International Affairs
and ‘Homeland Government’.
The failure of historical outdated socio-political and
economic systems, have left many disillusioned with the ability of Governments
to successfully govern their countries.
Communism, socialism, capitalism, nationalism and all the
other –ism’s have failed dismally to secure peace and stability in the world.
A global ‘renaissance’ is busy taking place while many
political leaders and international advisers are to skeptic to acknowledge the
political turmoil and dissatisfaction that is currently taking place. Demonstrations,
civil unrest and protest marches are prevalent throughout the Western and
Eastern world.
The reason why so
many political leaders and Heads of State are (seemingly) deliberately avoiding
these realities, is because it undoubtedly represents the greatest threat to
the current organized powers and the international political and economic power
bases.
Globalization and membership of the ‘Global Village’ have
created a ‘Global Governance’ where influential international role players have
secured their own unique Socio- Economic and political niches in an integrated international
power-base.
Centuries old Colonialism and Imperial domination has been
replaced by a system of ‘Global Government’.
THE POLITICAL RENAISSANCE
At the heart of the political renaissance lie the natural
human needs for dignity, basic human rights, equality, independence and religious
freedom.
The exclusion of these basic human rights have flamed almost
all the conflicts ravaging the world at the moment.
Anti Western sympathy became the main focus of many
terrorist organisations worldwide and contributed much to the intensification and turbulence caused
by this political awakening.
The French
Revolution of 1789/99, the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia of 1917, the Fascist
assumption of power in Italy in 1922, the Nazi seizure of the German state in
1933, the political awakening in China, passive resistance in India, and the
Mexican Revolution of the early 20th century, all reflected the politics of mass
dissatisfaction and resistance.
Regardless of the
final results, dissatisfaction will develop political and social consciousness
and the participation in massive political and social action aimed at bringing
about a major shift and change, and revolution in the political, social and
economic realms.
The youth in
particular are restless and resentful and the revolutionary ethos they embody
is a political time-bomb.
With the
exception of Europe, Japan and America, the rapidly growing ‘generation
gap’ between the older and more mature population and the expanding 25-year-old-and-under
age bracket, is creating a huge mass of impatient young people.
Their potential
revolutionary reaction to the current state of affairs is likely to emerge from
among the millions of students concentrated in the intellectually “tertiary
level” educational institutions of developing countries.
There are
currently between 80 and 130 million “college” students worldwide and these
millions of students are potential ‘revolutionaries-in-waiting’
The only effective
response can come from a genuinely committed vision of global solidarity.
A NEW ORDER
The need for a new
world socio-economic and socio-political structure, that can secure peace,
advances human rights and provides the conditions for economic progress, has
never seemed more appropriate.
The most
difficult issues facing national governments today are international in nature.
Global warming, global
financial crisis, ‘global war on terror’, has led to the global political
awakening and is rapidly expanding, as the social, political and economic
inequalities and disparities of the past are becoming more and more outdated and
impractical.
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