I am very focused on state craft because this will set a course and retain knowledge and progress and not be dependent on the leader of the day who will only add towards the course. Politics needs to be well crafted so it doesn't lead to back n forth and cancelling each other out every 5 years. Plus we can't rely on people short term ideas which may be corrupted to personal interest.
The following exists in terms of structures usually guided by constitutions and rule of law.
1. Republics.
2. Theocracy
3. Monarchy
4. Mix of some or all
State organs tend to be
1. Govt
2. Parliament
3. Courts
State structures tend to be
1. Federal
2. Confederal
3. Unitarian
Mode of Power
1. Elections,
2. Dictactorships
3. Dynasty Inheritance
4. Mix of some or all
The question I have is how do we achieve long retention of human capital by ensuring experience can develop and not be cancelled out in our institutions with the change of govt.
This requires state craft to ensure this crucial area of progress doesn't fall down to politics or reliant on 1 person who may die or may become corrupt or will be removed due to elections.
This is something all our leaders should sit down and set a course and ensure everyone in power holds a shared course not flip flop or cancel themselves out. We must work like a team with a set course that no-one can change becuz it has been settled and agreed to that it will produce dividiends and rapid progress for centuries to come. Political stability is a big index for investors and nation to nation relation, no-one invests or creates ties with flip floppers or uncertainty.
Successful countries do not play politics on state/institutional craft for centuries so it can lead to accumulated progress over time, but if everything is over-ridden or falls down to politics of the day, nothing tangible will be achieved in the long run and every generation inherits the same environment from 100 years ago. We must avoid that political death cycle that freedom can cause.
The following exists in terms of structures usually guided by constitutions and rule of law.
1. Republics.
2. Theocracy
3. Monarchy
4. Mix of some or all
State organs tend to be
1. Govt
2. Parliament
3. Courts
State structures tend to be
1. Federal
2. Confederal
3. Unitarian
Mode of Power
1. Elections,
2. Dictactorships
3. Dynasty Inheritance
4. Mix of some or all
The question I have is how do we achieve long retention of human capital by ensuring experience can develop and not be cancelled out in our institutions with the change of govt.
This requires state craft to ensure this crucial area of progress doesn't fall down to politics or reliant on 1 person who may die or may become corrupt or will be removed due to elections.
This is something all our leaders should sit down and set a course and ensure everyone in power holds a shared course not flip flop or cancel themselves out. We must work like a team with a set course that no-one can change becuz it has been settled and agreed to that it will produce dividiends and rapid progress for centuries to come. Political stability is a big index for investors and nation to nation relation, no-one invests or creates ties with flip floppers or uncertainty.
Successful countries do not play politics on state/institutional craft for centuries so it can lead to accumulated progress over time, but if everything is over-ridden or falls down to politics of the day, nothing tangible will be achieved in the long run and every generation inherits the same environment from 100 years ago. We must avoid that political death cycle that freedom can cause.
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