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The Roots Of Feudalism

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  • The Roots Of Feudalism

    THE ROOTS OF FEUDALISM

    http://www.aravot.am/en/2012/11/14/130153/
    NOVEMBER 14, 2012 13:10

    I have already written that there is no feudalism in Armenia in the
    academic sense of the word - i.e. a system that is based on closed,
    natural economy and simple exchange of goods. When we say "feudalism,"
    we mean the figurative meaning of the word - a system established on
    the given territory, a relationship, in which one person has
    unlimited,

    uncontrollable power and affords to behave like a medieval feudal
    lord. For example, he shouts "Who is the man who will be able to
    topple me?" or orders his bodyguard to kill a man who greeted him
    incorrectly. Or he beats up guilty people, being convinced that
    nothing will happen to him, the feudal lord.

    In that sense, there is a so-called "feudal" system in Armenia and
    Robert Kocharyan is right that majoritarian representation contributes
    to that system - in the pre-election period, the feudal lord is
    engaged in "charity," mobilizes the whole law-enforcement and
    administrative resource and guarantees the victory of the government's
    team. However, firstly, I can't recall that the second president was
    so opposed to the majoritarian system when he was in power, and
    secondly, the electoral system of the National Assembly is not the
    most important factor that contributes to feudalism.

    I don't want to simplify and personify the issue, writing about what
    is on the surface - the Armenian feudalism advanced, flourished and
    gained the current image during Robert Kocharyan's tenure. However, if
    the roots of the problem had been in the presidents' "political will,"
    we would have gotten rid of those morals long ago. The worst thing is
    that if, God forbid, I or, say, Avetik Ishkhanyan was the president of
    the republic, we would contribute to maintaining feudalism too.

    This system emerges not because the leaders and their "viziers" want
    it, not even because the feudal lords want it. The main reason is what
    the overwhelming majority of our population expects from the
    government. It expects that it will patronize, look after and take
    care of them. If a person expects a patron who will be kind, powerful
    and forgiving, who can play that role, besides a feudal lord?

    By the way, that expectation dominates the social atmosphere - the
    majority of citizens don't care much about the rest. Yesterday, for
    example, the Court of Appeals made an absolutely illegal decision. How
    many people protested against it? The very people who don't protest
    contribute to feudalism.

    ARAM ABRAHAMYAN

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