The Concept of Totalitarian Democracy
69Totalitarian democracy is a concept coined in Talmon's 1952 book The Origins of Totalitarian Democracy. The two terms are antinomic in appearancebut J. L. Talmon, an Israeli historian, wanted to refer to a system of government in which lawfully elected representatives maintain the integrity of a nation state whose citizens, while granted the right to vote, have little or no participation in the decision-making process of the government.
The Illuminati Order, Jacobinism and later Communism clearly represented this "ideal kind" of "democracy" as well as today George W. Bush New World Order also praised by ... Bill Clinton (see video here).
Governement by "Natural Law" according to Clinton Roosevelt
Excerpts from the Origins of Totalitarian Democracy
by Jacob L. Talmon
(London: Secker and Warburg, 1955), Intro, Part I
INTRODUCTION
THIS study is an attempt to show that concurrently with the liberal type of democracy there emerged from the same premises in the eighteenth century a trend towards what we propose to call the totalitarian type of democracy. These two currents have existed side by side ever since the eighteenth century. The tension between them has constituted an important chapter in modern history, and has now become the most vital issue of our time. It would of course be an exaggeration to suggest that the whole of the period can be summed up in terms of this conflict. Nevertheless it was always present, although usually confused and obscured by other issues, which may have seemed clearer to contemporaries, but viewed from the standpoint of the present day seem incidental and even trivial. Indeed, from the vantage point of the mid twentieth century the history of the last hundred and fifty years looks like a systematic preparation for the headlong collision between empirical and liberal democracy on the one hand, and totalitarian Messianic democracy on the other, in which the world crisis of to-day consists.
(I) THE TWO TYPES OF DEMOCRACY, LIBERAL AND TOTALITARIAN
The essential difference between the two schools of democratic thought as they have evolved is not, as is often alleged, in the affirmation of the value of liberty by one, and its denial by the other. It is in their different attitudes to politics. The liberal approach assumes politics to be a matter of trial and error, and regards political systems as pragmatic contrivances of human ingenuity and spontaneity. It also recognizes a variety of levels of personal and collective endeavour, which are altogether outside the sphere of politics. The totalitarian democratic school, on the other hand, is based upon the assumption of a sole and exclusive truth in politics. It may be called political Messianism in the sense that it postulates a preordained, harmonious and perfect scheme of things, to which men are irresistibly driven, and at which they are bound to arrive. It recognizes ultimately only one plane of existence, the political. It widens the scope of politics to embrace the whole of human existence. It treats all human thought and action as having social significance, and therefore as falling within the orbit of political action. Its political ideas are not a set of pragmatic precepts or a body of devices applicable to a special branch of human endeavour. They are an integral part of an all-embracing and coherent philosophy. Politics is defined as the art of applying this philosophy to the organization of society, and the final purpose of politics is only achieved when this philosophy reigns supreme over all fields of life.
Both schools affirm the supreme value of liberty. But whereas one finds the essence of freedom in spontaneity and the absence of coercion, the other believes it to be realized only in the pursuit and attainment of an absolute collective purpose. It is outside our scope to decide whether liberal democracy has the faith that totalitarian democracy claims to have in final aims. What is beyond dispute is that the final aims of liberal democracy have not the same concrete character. They are conceived in rather negative terms, and the use of force for their realization is considered as an evil. Liberal democrats believe that in the absence of coercion men and society may one day reach through a process of trial and error a state of ideal harmony. In the case of totalitarian democracy, this state is precisely defined, and is treated as a matter of immediate urgency, a challenge for direct action, an imminent event. The problem that arises for totalitarian democracy, and which is one of the main subjects of this study, may be called the paradox of freedom. Is human freedom compatible with an exclusive pattern of social existence, even if this pattern aims at the maximum of social justice and security ? The paradox of totalitarian democracy is in its insistence that they are compatible.Read also
- Science of government founded on natural law
by Clinton Roosevelt, Illuminati Member and Karl Marx Inspirator and Sponsor. - G. Chesterton - Capitalism and Communism rest on the same idea
a Centralization of Wealth destroying Private Property - [Science Fiction] The Domination by S.M. Stirling (the Utopian/Dysutopian Draka Society)
The "tactical" form of criticism (e.g. freedom of speech and association ) is allowed and even encouraged whereas the fundamental form (e.g. of serfdom) is not permitted.
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As long as individual sovereignty and (voluntary association) is not recognized and respected the thing called Democracy definitely cannot not exist because its first conception is aim politically to control and enslave men in a whole. People should read No treason: Lysander Spooner. What would be a perfect democracy if it not a man controlling the life of another man by coercion without his consent with the help of a big political military police apparatus.
This book sound very interesting. I' always looking for books which explain the evil thing call demon-cracy.
No right is acknowledged to conquered populations
You deserve more readers!
are you speaking about morality or voters rights to choose a leader










connie lane 5 years ago
In a democracy 51% of the population controls 49% of the population. If that 51% is in a media induced trance or some other form of mind control, the 49% will feel that they are trapped and without freedom regardless of what form of democracy it is. However, I never felt this before the 2000 election in the USA. When the majority of the people are wrong, everyone suffers! Your Hubs are so informative and I have learned so much. Thank you.