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Thursday, July 24, 2025

The after-election crowd: citizens, tribesmen and idiots

by

1801 days ago
20200818

Tues­day af­ter the elec­tion, my good friend, David Booth­man, sent me an in­ter­est­ing video-clip about how ‘’True-De­moc­rats’’ in a democ­ra­cy should be­have af­ter an elec­tion. The clip tes­ti­fied that in ‘’Greece the founder of democ­ra­cy,’’ peo­ple were ex­pect­ed to be­have in a man­ner that showed re­spect for their elect­ed rep­re­sen­ta­tives. The clip from Booth­man was very apt, giv­en the fact that many per­sons in Trinidad and To­ba­go seemed, by their many let­ters to the Press, to be an­gry with our lead­ers’ be­hav­iour­al ac­tions and say­ings, re­ac­tions that demon­strat­ed their loss or their win­ning of the na­tion­al elec­tions on Au­gust 10th. The clip, how­ev­er, made me think anew about Greece and its de­mo­c­ra­t­ic pos­tu­la­tions.

Democ­ra­cy is gen­er­al­ly as­so­ci­at­ed with the Greeks and Ro­mans in ear­li­er times and with Eu­ro­peans in the Me­dieval Pe­ri­od. Tru­ly, Greeks in the Gold­en Age (500-300 BCE) had many city-states: some aris­to­crat­ic, some ruled by mon­archs, and oth­ers by tyrants. De­spite their dif­fer­ences, Athe­ni­ans in Greece were able to fash­ion out of the dif­fer­ent, in­ter­re­lat­ed en­ti­ties a de­mo­c­ra­t­ic or­der, where­by the au­thor­i­ta­tive pow­er of the state was vest­ed in the peo­ple and ex­er­cised by them di­rect­ly or in­di­rect­ly, through a sys­tem of rep­re­sen­ta­tion that in­volved elec­tions pe­ri­od­i­cal­ly. His­to­ry shows that un­der Cleis­thenes in Athens around 508 BCE, the gov­ern­ment was re­formed and placed on a de­mo­c­ra­t­ic foot­ing with a Coun­cil and a Ju­ry and these in­sti­tu­tions were fur­ther for­ti­fied by the works of Per­i­cles (461-429 BCE), Socrates (469-399) and his pupil Pla­to, as well as the out­stand­ing philoso­pher of the era, Aris­to­tle (384-322 BCE).

What all stu­dents and aca­d­e­mics should know, how­ev­er, is that Greece de­vel­oped its in­sti­tu­tions long af­ter the civil­i­sa­tions of Africa, in par­tic­u­lar, Ethiopia and Egypt, and the Near East, in­clud­ing the Sume­ri­ans in Mesopotamia be­tween the rivers Tigris and Eu­phrates. More­over, In­dia with its ear­ly re­publics such as the Sang­has of Bud­dha and the Ganas (at­ten­dants of Shi­va) prac­tised democ­ra­cy as ear­ly as the 6th cen­tu­ry BCE. Some his­to­ri­ans even con­sid­er the Bud­dhist Sang­ha as the world’s old­est democ­ra­cy. In fact, Diodor­us, the Greek his­to­ri­an, two hun­dred years af­ter Alexan­der the so-called Great in­vad­ed In­dia, wrote that In­dia pos­sessed sys­tems of democ­ra­cy in like man­ner to Greece, then. Ac­cord­ing­ly, when I heard Booth­man’s video clip, I told my­self that Africans and In­di­ans in Trinidad and To­ba­go should in­deed be po­lit­i­cal­ly proud of their man­age­ment process of hold­ing elec­tions here, since their fore­fa­thers were prac­ti­tion­ers of democ­ra­cy long be­fore Eu­ro­peans wrote his­to­ry.

His­to­ry shows that the Greeks in Athens, based on the phi­los­o­phy and le­gal codes of the Egyp­tians, de­vel­oped a ‘’three-way Athen­ian De­mo­c­ra­t­ic Code’’ by which they were able to as­sess and de­scribe the be­hav­iour of all el­i­gi­ble elec­tors with­in the state of Athens and even with­in the city-state of Spar­ta in Greece.

In terms of the ‘’three-way’’ group­ing, first, there were those per­sons who, like many in Trinidad and To­ba­go, re­fused to vote for rep­re­sen­ta­tives to the Coun­cil in Athens (The Na­tion­al As­sem­bly); Greek so­ci­ety called them ‘’Id­iots.’’ An id­iot was thus a pri­vate per­son who kept to him­self/her­self and re­fused to be part of the Gov­ern­ment. As time pro­gressed, based on the Latin word ‘’Id­io­ta,’’ Eu­ro­peans placed a deroga­to­ry twist to the word and caused it to mean an ‘’un­e­d­u­cat­ed or ig­no­rant’’ per­son.

The sec­ond group of per­sons in the Athen­ian Code con­sist­ed of those who, like many in Trinidad and To­ba­go, se­lect­ed their rep­re­sen­ta­tives nar­row­ly, on the ba­sis of their tribe. Such per­sons in Athens cared not for what was be­ing dis­cussed in the Coun­cil nor the thought-pro­vok­ing mus­ings in the mar­ket­place and were thus termed ‘’Tribes­men.’’ Athens was filled with them at the time. One could eas­i­ly es­py, then, Spar­tans, Per­sians, Corinthi­ans, Mace­do­nians, Helots, Mi­noans, and Phoeni­cians not on­ly by their dress but by their colour of face. For elec­tions to the Coun­cil, tribes­men vot­ed for their own.

The third group in the Code was re­ferred to as ‘’Cit­i­zens.’’ Cit­i­zens were ed­u­cat­ed per­sons who de­bat­ed is­sues; who vot­ed for rep­re­sen­ta­tives based on their knowl­edge of phi­los­o­phy; who stud­ied and prac­tised agri­cul­ture; who re­spect­ed God and fam­i­ly life; and who, in the long run, put Athens first in every­thing that they did. Of course, cit­i­zens were con­sid­ered by the Coun­cil to be the most prin­ci­pled and high­est ech­e­lons of the state, and all per­sons in the so­ci­ety, with en­cour­age­ment from the state, aimed to join that ed­u­cat­ed group.

But Athens al­so had a se­cret fourth group in its Code. These were per­sons who the gov­ern­ment felt were worse than the id­iots, in that they un­der­mined the so­ci­ety by try­ing to de­stroy its in­sti­tu­tions. The lead­ers of Athens there­fore ‘’os­tra­cized’’ them. To be ‘’os­tra­cized,’’ ac­cord­ing to the Greeks, was to be banned from so­ci­ety. In­deed, Themis­to­cles, who, it was said, tried to dis­rupt the smooth flow of the Coun­cil in Athens was ‘’os­tra­cized;’’ he was im­pris­oned for a pe­ri­od of five to ten years. What was his crime? He was found guilty of giv­ing mon­ey to peo­ple in Athens for rea­sons not ap­proved by the Coun­cil.

Thus, in Athens, there were three groups of per­sons and a se­cret one that few his­to­ri­ans speak about: the os­tra­cized. On the con­trary, how well do I re­mem­ber my friends in Bar­ba­dos, his­to­ri­an Trevor Mar­shall and pub­lic ser­vant Vin­cent ‘’Buff’’ Bur­nett, telling me that Bar­ba­dos has a name for the os­tra­cized per­sons. ‘’In Bar­ba­dos,’’ ac­cord­ing to Trevor and Buff, ‘’we name and os­tra­cize them open­ly for their ig­no­rance, lack of ed­u­ca­tion, racism, fraud, greed, their un­der­cov­er moves to un­der­mine the so­ci­ety, and their idol­is­ing of mon­ey. In Bar­ba­dos, we call them Half o’ Id­iots.’’ In­deed, ‘’go long you half o’ id­iot’’ is a favourite, de­mean­ing curse­word of Bar­ba­di­ans.

Trinida­di­ans and To­bag­o­ni­ans, there­fore, have a splen­did, his­tor­i­cal tem­plate where­by we the peo­ple can study the pit­falls and chal­lenges of a so­ci­ety that aims to bring in­to fo­cus the democ­ra­cy of our an­ces­tors. When, then, Hen­ry Ford said: ‘’His­to­ry is more or less bunk,’’ in­deed, he can cer­tain­ly be clas­si­fied as a ‘’Half o’ id­iot.’’

Hol­lis ‘’Chalk­dust’’ Liv­er­pool, ORTT.

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