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On Road Blocks and Parenting
By Lykke E. Andersen*,
La Paz,
18
June
2007.
Governing a country is a lot like raising children. You have to
make sure your subjects are kept safe and healthy and receive a
useful education they can live on in the future. You also have
to teach them what is right and wrong, and what are their rights
and obligations. You should abstain from violence, but still be
very clear about what kinds of behaviors are unacceptable.
Good parenting will lead to responsible, independent citizens
who contribute to society, whereas bad parenting will lead to
spoilt, immature, dependent and/or corrupt citizens who
constitute a liability to society.
Everybody hates when a spoilt child throws a tantrum in the
supermarket because his mother won’t buy him the box of candy he
has put his eyes on. The child has learnt that the tantrum is a
very effective way of getting what he wants as the mother gets
so embarrassed
by his behaviour that she quickly gives in to his demands. She
has repeatedly permitted, and even rewarded, bad behavior. If
she instead the very first time had made clear that such
behavior is unacceptable, she would never again have had that
problem.
In Bolivia the adult equivalent of the spoilt child tantrum is
blockades. Every time somebody wants something in Bolivia, they
block the roads thus causing great inconvenience, economic
losses and even danger to other citizens. This has proven a very
effective way of achieving things in Bolivia, as the government
usually gives in within a day or two.
In the short run it makes sense to give in as the costs to
society of a continued blockade are generally much higher than
the costs of complying with the specific demand. In the long
run, however, it just means a never ending series of blockades
and demands.
Unfortunately blockades have been permitted for such a long time
that it will be very difficult to suddenly turn around and say
that now it will no longer be tolerated. Certainly Evo Morales
cannot be expected to
be able to
do that,
as he was the one who perfected the art of road blocking. But
hopefully the next government can convince the population that
the social costs of blockades are much too high, and that road
blocks should not and will not be tolerated.
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