Bertrand Russel has provided a remarkable perception of power in his book 'Power : A New Social Analysis'. He said, "Power may be defined as the production of intended effects. The fundamental concept of social science is power, in the same sense in which energy is the fundamental concept in physics. Like energy, power has many forms." Russel's 'production of intended effects' is the political ideology of power which is socially reclaimed in all spheres of human psychosis.
That psychosis creates a labyrinth from which grows the fear of freedom. The fear psychosis numbs the critical consciousness of the feared. The feared bemoans the befallen catastrophe over their existence and essence but fear to challenge the absoluteness of power. Their benumbed souls remain as inert as ever. That inertia is the outcome of the production of intended effects of power and the intended effects loom large over horizontal spheres of the feared human beings who are less powerful or absolutely powerless. But it is not that the powerless has no power to wield. The feared too have the power but not enough to overcome their fear.
When we say power, we generally mean political power. Power is politically distributed among the various cross-sections of people. In that sense power is both vertically and horizontally divided and the vertices culminate in a pyramidical superstructure. On the top of the pyramid rests the fearful and on its base writhe the feared ones at the mercy of the most powerful ones. Those with the absolute power at their disposal are the supreme authority to wield their all ammunitions of political power with indulgence and insistence of violence. And violence is not only the metaphor of political power but also the categorical pronouncement and praxis of politics of power.
And, yes, political power grows out of the barrel of a gun. No, it is not just a catchword of Mao's politics. It is the catchword of politics and political power of all hues. Nobody can deny that those who wield the gun, wield the power and vice versa. Power is a manifestation of violence authored and perpetrated perpetually by the authority or that the power-that-be consisting of a handful. It is because that the fearful only have all the power to enthrone themselves to the seat of power, be it democratic or otherwise.
Democracy too does cohere the most fearful and most powerful as democracy without power is like a king without his fangless sceptre. Without power at the base how can the juggernaut of democracy. The powerful are 'the democrat' and the powerless are 'the democratised' in the long course of history of changing hands of power among the most powerful. The democratised have never been democrats and they do not have any affordable power to 'democratise' the democrats in democratic nuances. It is power of democratic politics that eternalises democracy and reserves power for the powerful.
Power is power over the powerless people to dominate over them and to enjoy unbridled authority over them. And ordinary people have got no power to wield the gun, so they have no power of authority and no power over the authority or the powerful power-that-be to dominate over them. Those who do not wield power to dominate are destined to be dominated and be ruled. So, people are ruled, the ruled and people are destined to be the ruled as having no power of wielding gun and wielding power.
Published by Kayzzaman
I am a retired person. Now I am totally involved in reading and writing. I am passionately in love with life. View profile
- The Ideology and Politics of North Korea, the DPRKA brief alternative perspective on the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, better known as North Korea to westerners.
- Democracy and Civil Society in TurkmenistanDemocracy has become a widespread form of government. This research paper examines democracy and civil society in Turkmenistan.
- The Democrat Party Civil WarThe Democrat Party is in the midst of a civil war between two sets of its traditional voting blocks that threaten to rip it apart. The reason for this mess that may well cost the party of FDR, JFK, and Bill Clinton th...
- The Rise and Fall of the British EmpireWith no luck finding precious metals, privatized naval warfare - privateering - became the norm because robbing Spanish and Portuguese ships was easiest.
- Educational Leadership and PoliticsIt is interesting that we explore the notion of leadership in the field of education at this political moment in history.
- Democracy and Politics of Power
- Obama or No-Obama, it is Only Politics of Power
- Power and Politics: A Sociological View
- A Reaction to The Politics of Injustice: Book Derides Harsh Penal Measures
- The Politics of Paper: The Industry of the Fox Valley
- How Has the Government and Politics of England Been Shaped by Its History?
- Abuse of Power -- Sarah Palin Found to Have Violated Public Trust
