Thanks, this is really interesting. It goes against our sensibilities
to realize that in some places in the world, folks rely on the
military for the kind of stability we take for granted from an elected
civilian government.
Living near the edge of New York State, I am seeing the kind of
political chaos there that can sometimes break out. I don't see the
National Guard taking over Albany anytime soon, but I might trust them
for the short term over some of the bozos (indicted Democrats, ah my
people) that are trying to take charge.
Guess the message is that in a fallen world it is hard to make
categorical statements about what is best (example comes to mind:
George W. Bush's insistence on democracy at any price. We're all for
democracy, but wait, the Hezbollah?)
P.T. Forsyth once said it is bad for the church to find itself on one
side in a civil war. Your Honduran colleagues are making a
provisional guess that in the short term a coup is better than the
alternatives. I suspect none would equate that outcome with the
kingdom.
-Rick
Richard Floyd
rfl...@berkshire.rr.com
"We thought Central American democracy had consolidated sufficiently to avoid this," Arias said. "It is sad to see some civilians applaud a coup just because they disagree with policies. This has shown us that democratic institutions in Central America are still fragile . . . vulnerable."