Socrates argued that democracy fails because most people vote emotionally rather than rationally, choosing leaders who promise comfort over truth (like a candy seller) rather than those who provide difficult but necessary guidance (like a doctor), which can lead to the rise of weak leaders through manipulation rather than wisdom.
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socrates warned us about this #democracy #shortsAñadido:
Everyone thinks democracy is perfect.
Freedom, equality, power to the people.
But what if [music] I told you one of the greatest minds in history completely disagreed?
Socrates, the father of Western philosophy, didn't trust democracy at all.
And his reason [music] is uncomfortable.
He asked a simple question.
If you were on a ship in the middle of a storm, who would you trust to lead?
A random [music] group of passengers, or someone trained to navigate?
The answer is obvious.
So why, when it comes to running a country, do we let anyone decide? [music] That was his point.
Voting >> [music] >> isn't just a right, it's a skill.
And like any skill, it requires knowledge, discipline, and judgment.
But here's the dangerous part.
Most people [music] don't think deeply.
They react emotionally.
And that's where democracy starts to break.
Because people don't vote for what's right, [music] they vote for what feels good.
Socrates warned about this over 2,000 years ago.
>> [music] >> He said elections can become a battle between two types of people.
One, like a doctor. [music] The other, like a candy seller.
The doctor tells you the truth.
Work harder. [music] Be disciplined. Accept discomfort.
The candy seller tells you what you want to hear.
Relax. Enjoy. Everything will [music] be easy.
Now ask yourself, who wins?
Not the one who's right.
The one who's liked.
And that's how weak leaders rise.
Not through wisdom, >> [music] >> but through manipulation.
Socrates didn't just talk about this.
He paid for it with his life.
In 399 BC, he was put on trial by the very democracy he questioned.
Hundreds of citizens voted and decided he should die.
Not because he was wrong, but because he made people uncomfortable.
That's the flaw.
A system where truth [music] can lose to popularity.
And today, nothing has changed. We still choose leaders who promise comfort over truth, easy answers over hard reality.
And Socrates knew where that leads.
To manipulation.
To chaos.
To decline.
So, the real question isn't, is [music] democracy good?
The real question is, are the people wise enough to sustain it?
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