Wednesday, September 18, 2024

Review: The Mechanics of Changing the World by John Macgregor


Genre: Non-Fiction

Description:

The Mechanics of Changing the World argues that war, inequality and climate

change are insoluble within our current system of government. That they will only

be curable at the level of causes: the level of democratic design.

 

‘Third draft democracy’ is a suite of interlocking reforms to decontaminate politics,

decentralise information, and democratise decision-making. It’s a natural evolution

of the first (Greek) and second (Euro-American) ‘drafts’ of the democratic experiment.

 

The last half-century has seen the antiwar movement, Perestroika, Tiananmen,

Occupy, and the Arab Spring: great activism, great ideals, strong popular support.

Yet none of these built anything lasting.

 

One-off campaigns—whether against lopsided trade deals, poverty or surveillance—

are fragile. Changing the world needs more than inspired troubleshooting. It needs

architecture”

 

Author:

“John Macgregor has won national awards for literature and investigative journalism, managed aid projects in Cambodia, and wrote the story development for the movie Shine. From Washington, Rangoon and occupied East Timor, he has reported on science, politics, corruption and slavery for The New York Times, New Scientist and The Sydney Morning Herald.”

Appraisal:

The author has an interesting take on governments in the world today that are democratic. He makes a strong case that some of the world’s issues aren’t likely to get resolved until the form of government is reformed. Note that the issues the author is thinking of could, in some cases lead to extinction of life on Earth (climate change or war, if it goes nuclear). Or the third item, inequality, continuing in its current direction could leave us wishing we’d been wiped out.

The author does an excellent job explaining the history of democracy, evolving from what he calls first draft democracy into what we have in many countries today, that he calls second draft. He explains where the weaknesses in the current systems are. He makes the case for why tweaking these existing systems isn’t going to fix things well enough to work. He then explains what would work, why it lays the foundation for a political system that will work better and doesn’t have the fatal flaws the current systems do.

One thing that I found interesting early on was the author said that no reader was going to agree with everything he says and indicates that hoping for that would “be at odds with the spirit of the book.” He also indicates that his ideas are sometimes going to be things that we would perceive as being on the left of the political spectrum and other times on the right of the spectrum, which was correct. But I found myself not objecting to many of his suggestions that weren’t in sync with my current political leanings. He argues that much political conflict in today’s world happens for reasons that might not be what we perceive as their cause.

Last, the author doesn’t throw out things he claims are facts that many would question and just expect the reader to take his word for it. There are over 1,500 footnotes with each footnote providing a link to a source backing up his claim, so if you want to dig deeper, he’ll help you start down that rabbit hole. I’d recommend this book to anyone with any interest in politics (and if you aren’t interested, you should be).

Buy now from:            Amazon US        Amazon UK

FYI:

The author specifically mentions that the language he uses in the book is “a mix of the Australian, American and British dialects” of English. That seemed accurate.

Format/Typo Issues:

My review is based on a pre-release copy of the book, so I can’t gauge the final product in this area.

Rating: **** Four Stars

Reviewed by: BigAl

Approximate word count: 120-125,000 words

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