Basics of ideology
Sexual Front Manifesto
  French: Sexual Front Manifeste
  German: Sexual Front Manifest
  Italian: Sexual Front Manifesto

Optimal orgasms and a gentle death instead of God
  German: Optimale Orgasmen und ein sanfter Tod statt Gott (1.0)
  Italian: Ottimi orgasmi e una morte delicata, invece di Dio (1.0)
  Italian: Ottimi orgasmi e una morte delicata, invece di Dio (1.3)
The idea of a gentle death
Truth and lunacy
Me and my genes
Self-cognition and male/female sexuality
Marxism and personal values
Imposed freedom
Progress and quality of life
Nihilism?

Sexual politics
Democracy
Why poor Third World democracies are a poor option for foreign investors
Wrong perceptions about democracy
Leadership vs democracy
Why everything gets worse in poor democracies
Bad democracies
US-style democracy
Democracy overemphasizes change
Better democracy

Activism
An elitist ruling party; a constitution; democracy; and freedom
Sexual Front politics
How we can change the world
Policies for a society of greater sexual freedom
Second tier values: freedom and safety
The fallacies of Libertarian politics
Violence as political tool
The necessity, and benefits, of destruction
The problem with leftist politics
Their model, my model
The anarchistic alternative
States are not per se obstacles to personal freedom
Less government, more personal freedom
"Personal freedom" strategy
Will the male and female sex drive ever square?
Male competition or male solidarity?
Activism for nihilists
Agenda for political activism
  Spanish: La necesidad de activismo político
On what to spend your money

Problematic wealth
The wealth trap
  German: Die Reichtum-Falle
  Italian: La trappola della ricchezza
The poverty-sexuality connection
Who needs a rich society?
Population policies
A better world order
  Spanish: Un mejor orden mundial

Cultural imperialism
Cultural imperialism
Anti-sexual US agenda
Why the US is morally out of proportion
The real reason for anti-Americanism
  Swedish Anti-amerikanismens verkliga orsak
America at war
Why we are winning the Iraq war
Hope on China
Why China's success is crucial
Why there is nothing wrong with corruption

Feminism
Genuine feminism
Female adaptations
Sexual morals
Female emancipation
  Dutch: Vrouwelijke Emancipatie
Anti-sexual feminism
Brainwashing young females
Anti women
The motivations behind feminazism
  Spanish: Las verdaderas motivaciones del feminazismo
Disease and sexual morals

Drugs
Drugs
The legalization of drugs
The anti-religious effect of drugs
Who is against drugs?
Drugs and religions
The value of lifestyle drugs
Drugs for sexual enhancement
Death from opiates

Commercial sex
Prostitution and commercial sex
  Italian: Prostituzione e commercio sessuale
Commercial sex establishments
  Spanish: Cerrando establecimientos de sexo comercial
Sex for food
Prostitution
US Congress regulating international dating (biological interests)
  Italian: Il Congresso degli Stati Uniti regola le unioni internazionali
US International Marriage Broker Regulation Act of 2005
Third World tourism
Promoting sex tourism?
The dialectics of US meddling

Religion
Why I write about Mr. S ...
S ... - a priest whose primary interest is sexual
Child torture, child murder in Africa
C... and the Philippine colonial mentality
Missionaries
A Catholic priest in Cambodia
Burden of proof
Why young adults can favor anti-sexual religions
Why Bin Laden has an endless supply of suicide bombers

Law
Laws of principle (disproportional punishments; extraterritorial laws)
Leaving US citizenship (disproportional punishments; extraterritorial laws)
Multiple citizenship
US human rights (disproportional view of rights and violence)
Violent and non-violent crime (disproportional punishments for social engineering)
Constitutional proposal (constitutional right to sexual satisfaction)
Age discrimination (no birth records)
Youth emancipation
An alternative legal theory (victim and perpetrator settlement)
Dynamic justice (victim and perpetrator settlement)

Rape charges
Sexual violence
Sexual culture (how laws can change sexual culture in a country very quickly)
Anti-male legal bias
False rape accusations
Feminazi's rape
Violent crime
Holding judges criminally liable for inappropriate sentences
Male fools (disadvantageous to have a relationship with a woman with a previous child)

The media
Regulating the media
Banning sexual reporting
Over-reporting "sexual predators"
The BBC
A good story

Third World development
From poverty to prosperity
Globalization
How to lure foreign investment into a Third World country
Foreign investment
My recipe for Third World development
Creating wealth in Third World countries
Why Indonesia should liberalize its drug laws
High visa charges
Colonialism
Why Third World countries are poor
The trickery of economic aid
Scandinavian hypocrisy
  German: Skandinavische Scheinheiligkeit
The new cultural imperialism
My advice to young women in Third World cities



Wrong perceptions about democracy


Version 1.2, September 2006

I am strongly in favor of personal freedom for me and everybody else, but I do not equate democracy with freedom. Why should I? I refuse to be trapped by the common US propaganda in this respect.

The term “democracy’ just describes a procedure by which a government is constituted: by a more or less direct vote of a large number of people. The government thus constituted may or may not preserve a high degree of personal freedom for its people.

Hitler was elected in a democratic process, and Iran has, by any standard, genuine democracy. In either case, it neither means that the elected government allowed or allows a high degree of personal freedom, nor that, for that matter, it has been or is beneficial for those who have elected it.

In most countries of the world, the average voter is not capable of comprehending what political powers will do him good. And anyway, most people would not vote for political powers that would do them good, even if they could identify them. Rather, people vote for political powers of which they believe that they will be even worse for those with whom they have scores to settle than they will be for themselves.

It’s the most basic recipe of populism: play the resentments of a large number of rather uneducated people, and they will vote for you. This is the appeal of campaigning on a wave of hatred towards successful minorities (as Hitler did in Germany), or foreigners who are doing good. It’s also the appeal of campaigning on a wave of envy towards a country’s upper classes, or on a wave of jealousy towards those who are in a position to enjoy life better than the average voter.

Precisely for this reason, the implementation of direct-vote democracy in poor Third World countries typically means that there is a flood of new legislation that specifically interferes with the personal freedom of those who have the means to enjoy their personal freedom to a higher degree.

Anti-sexual legislation is an example. When the majority of poor people have the say, then the possibly libertine lifestyle of richer people will be criminalized… not so much because it would contradict the religion of the land, but because those who can’t have it themselves are in no mood to grant it to others. A good number of people who cannot enjoy a libertine lifestyle (as North African immigrants in European countries where they have a low sexual market value) may even turn religious not because of a genuine conviction of the truth of a religion but because certain religions (as Islam in Europe) provide a natural home for those who want the worst for those who can enjoy what they themselves can’t. This is why such religiousness is a trend, not something that would result from individual contemplation on a religion’s truth.

US-style democracy may work in the US where the voting population is largely homogenous in its diversity throughout the country. Compared to countries especially in Africa and Asia, there are, in the US, few regional loyalties. Californians will not necessarily vote for Californians, but Hutus will definitely vote for Hutus and Tamils for Tamils. There is no crossing of ethnic lines. Furthermore, in Iraq Schiites vote for Shiites and Sunnis for Sunnis. Anyway you turn it in such countries, direct democracy is a recipe for disintegration. This is the case because those ethnic politicians who exploit ethnic or religious hatred will be elected, and not those who play a tune of interethnic understanding. The reason is obvious: people vote for what is bad for those they hate; they do not vote for what is good for them (see above).

That I object against the US model of democracy does not mean that I would be in favor of monarchies or military dictatorships. But there are other alternatives. For example indirect democracies in which rather small groups of people elect delegates who then elect either legislative and executive leaders, or, even better, who then elect again a group of delegates who elect legislative and executive leaders (three tiers).

For example: neighborhoods elect delegates who elect city delegates; city delegates then elect legislative delegates, and legislative delegates elect executives. Such a system will strongly reduce the window for populism, both left and right. For in such a system, there is much more incentive to make everything work, and to do so by means of compromise. There is also more incentive to maintain a level of personal freedom that can be enjoyed by those who likely have the means: the delegate class (let this be many thousands; the more the better).

This form of democracy can be further sophisticated by integrating delegates from outside political parties - a system Suharto established in Indonesia to achieve an amazing level of stability for more than 30 years; delegates in Suharto’s Indonesia were not only from political parties but included traditional ethnic leaders and delegates from religions. Why not, in a modern country, have delegates from universities, the industry, labor unions, and environmental protection groups?

Even though the Suharto era in Indonesia was a dictatorship, and even though there were widespread massacres at the onset of the Suharto rule, he did not need a large military and police force to stay in power. Actually, if the military would not have deserted him, his government would not have ended as it did. Suharto ruled on a basis of finely tuned alliances from all quarters of society.

The weakness, obviously, of political systems like Suharto’s is that they stand and fall with the power broker at the top. For this reason alone, the Suharto model would have to be discarded.

Another existing alternative to US-style democracy is a single party state as the one in China. The structural ideology for such a state is Leninism, but China is the perfect proof that Leninism can be implemented without Communism, and that it can generate a high degree of economic and personal freedom, with a few exceptions that are of little concern to most people (no political careers outside and in opposition to the party; no US-inspired religiousness; no access to mass media that willingly or unwillingly supports the hidden US agenda of destabilizing China).

Most Americans who have no first-hand experience of the current China wrongly assume that the average Chinese is more restricted in his daily life (and thus less free) than the average American. But this is not the case. In fact, the one country in the world where people’s everyday life is possibly regulated to the highest degree is not China but the US. In the US, you have to have a fairly high level of legal awareness in order to not break the law unintentionally (especially when it comes to sexual conduct). And punishments in the US are severe (which is why the US has the highest prison population in the world, measured as a percentage of the general population).

On the other hand, democratizing Asian countries along the US model has often resulted in severe restrictions of personal freedom, especially if populist politicians who get elected democratically play religious tunes. A recent example is Indonesia. Suharto, though a Muslim, was strictly secular, and religious rules were there to follow by those who wanted to follow them. Now, Islamic religious rules are increasingly forced on everybody in Indonesia, including even those whose religion is another one. It’s democracy alright, but democracy cannot be equated with freedom.

So why is the US so interested in promoting worldwide democracy?

Occasionally, it’s just stupidity, as in the case of Iraq.

But normally, the US has a vital interest in promoting its own brand of democracy. For it’s strongly destabilizing in many parts of the world, and thus undermines potential competitors for world domination. It worked perfectly for the former Soviet Union (and the US would love to repeat that feat in China). And it has kept other countries weak and poor (as the Philippines).

But it’s predictable that the US will sooner or later realize that trying to promote democracy just anywhere isn’t in their interest at all. A democratically elected government in nuclear weapon-equipped Pakistan would be a nightmare, and from Algeria to Saudi Arabia , the US are better off with what there is now than with what they would get if democracy were to be given a genuine try.

Large segments of the local populations of these countries should be thankful. The dictatorships protect them from the potential ill effects of their own envy-based voting attitudes, and anyway, who wants to follow strict religious regulations is free to do so.

Why Democracy Is Not Freedom

The Rise of Illiberal Democracy

Once Again, Democracy Is Not Freedom

Democracy Does Not Ensure Liberty