Quote Originally Posted by Ramil View Post
Unfortunately, taking many 'democratic' countries as an example I see that this is usually not enough to form 'humanistic socially oriented national policy'. Nearly every country in the world is a democracy now, but where do we see 'humanistic and socially oriented national policy'? Only in a select few (the most wealthy ones).
Let's then take Brunei, Oman, Qatar and Saudi Arabya - the absolute monarchies. In many ways, these 'dictatorships' provide better and more humanistic national policies than their democratic counterparts.

I'd be interested to hear how you've rated Brunei, Oman, Qatar and Saudi Arabia as being in possession of humanistic national policies. I am not being facetious; I'm very curious to hear the details of your assessment. The principles of monarchy have been examined many times in literature, of which dissertations my favorite is Machiavelli's; I've not read one that does not dismiss the general populace, PARTICULARLY the poorer sections of these populae (commonly called "peasants" in these older texts), as being little more than a movable, pliable, and penultimately enslaved resource among many on the chess-board of the Monarch. How the position of this Monarch could be swayed, autonomously or by outside forces, to represent support of the "humanistic" and "social" segments of societal thought, I fail to understand.