Fair enough, let's stay on topic then.
Given that ultimately it is the people that are the source of power for any country, they are the ones ultimately responsible for how they are governed. Blaming outside forces is merely an excuse, Pakistan being a case in point. Its ruling powers decided on the best way forward to pursue its perceived national interests and for each set of pros, there was also a set of cons, right up to the present Broadsheet brouhaha. Tools for politically motivated victimization, and that too only selectively and intermittently applied, is never a way to actually correct anything.
The end results are entirely predictable and before all the world to see. The concluding implosion is only a matter of time.
To some level I agree, but each society's elitists finds the specific frog slow boil zone....where things are pretty gross but not enough to really get people to rise up and cause a revolution (if that's the final thing we are implying here w.r.t people being the ultimate source of political power).
I don't blame the people at large for that. The majority are eking out a meagre living (in the soft-boil environment, long ignorant, desensitized to it or pragmatically resigned to it), they have no time to educate themselves (at the scales needed) on the true nature of the power structures both imposed from the top, yet ultimately sourced from the bottom.
Then going past that (hypothetically) to put everything aside, invest the significant emotional energy to organise and wield effective physical raw-quantitative power and be prepared to shed their lives (leaving behind what precious stuff they built in a family and dwelling with faith reposed in ultimate justice far larger than anything) in some intense moment against vastly more organised qualititative power....staking it all for no certain result and permanence.
It is not easy....thus I simply cannot hold the masses to be fully or even mostly responsible or deserving of the leaders they get....as the latter are amply far more able to learn from the events and reasons behind the episodes in history where they did get overturned by some manner of peasant storming....compared to how the peasantry can learn from this....that too finding time to figure out how to adapt that for this day and age too.
I am not giving them a complete excuse on it, they can definitely do mass protest movements more regularly and such for sure....but then again that often causes just a cursory change on some issue among the elitists rather than a genuine deep change. The latter is very rare in history....and I really don't want to imagine what it would look like for most nation-states today given the level and sophistication of the weaponry the elitists all have compared to vastly un-armed public. The likely blowback (on them) with even conventional weapons is immense, and what would the non-conventional paradigm involve? Crucial year of 1991, world lucked out those were secured far from the army-rebels that staged a coup (a counter coup as they saw it) in Moscow.
So what chance does a mass-peasantry currently (especially in today's modern/dystopian world) have against the proletariat (who are mostly a coin flip on such a thing, definitely more reluctant than before) and then bourgeoisie and then creme-elitists these days....given the last two are well set in what narratives offer the most Soma for the slow-boil stability?
Hence this is all why I feel especially in this day and age, I feel the highest sensitivity to some change in power deployment (with intent or by accident) comes from the elitists enlightening/changing on various aspects and competing among themselves mostly for whatever reason.
I don't like this state of affairs one bit, in fact I despise it (much like I despise the average realized output of human nature, especially the impulsive kind)...but I feel it's the reality...and I give a big pass (with automatic good faith) to the people on the ground (just like me) wherever they are....that for the large part they are trying the best they can with what they have and the priorities they are submerged in and engaged in for the bulk of their time and energy.
Anyway, since Joe has been tagged a couple times already, I will let him maybe give his thoughts on it before I might unpack more of this.