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The Tragedy of Politics — Including Democratic Politics

Robert Kiyosaki

Brian Maher

Contributor, Freedom Financial News
Posted June 29, 2026

Dear Reader,

This past weekend I witnessed a combustible television debate between two partisan energumens concerning this year’s midterm elections.

It wore the soul right out of me… and I came away in a very low state of morale.

Alas, no man can avoid politics. All are in siege.

Few rival fields of human enterprise can approach its ferocity. War is the extension of what by other means… in Mr. Carl von Clausewitz’s grim telling?

The answer is politics of course.

Today I refile my scorching tort against politics.

Politics separates, divides, enrages, disrupts — as war itself separates, divides, enrages, disrupts.

Democratic politics offer no exception.

The Essence of Electoral Politics

Assume a democratic election. In the one corner you have Candidate X. In the opposing corner you have Candidate Y.

Each is nothing more in this world than a liar, jackleg or rogue.

This human sculch appears before the voters, hopeful of election.

Both roar their flubdubberies before eager and attentive crowds. Both shout their propagandas.

Each denounces the other as an arm of Satan. Amazingly, both are correct.

Come the election…

50.1% of voters may yank a lever for X. 49.9% may pull one for Y.

Thus X claims the laurel. He proceeds immediately against the desires, hopes and interests of the hapless 49.9%.

Each day they live they wither, cringe and chafe beneath X’s atrocities… helpless as worms on fisherman’s hooks.

Only upon some distant November can they heave this jackal out. Assume they do.

Yor some other Y — comes in. X’s voters must then endure their own parallel hells until the following election.

In Politics, Smaller Is Better

The same pitiful calculus applies to elections at any level of American government, down to canine-catcher.

But the higher the office, the greater the menace.

The mayor of Why, Arizona, may impose his torments upon his encircled victims — as may the mayor of Whynot, North Carolina.

Yet their victims are free to jump the fence. The bordering hamlet might run to saner and more tolerable settings. And so the oppressed flee.

The same dynamic applies to states.

Has a California or an Oregon or an Illinois gone lunatic? For many they have. But a Texas or a Tennessee or a Utah holds out asylum.

These local competitions form a severe brake on the natural rascalities of politics. It is, in fact, the crowning glory of the American device of government.

But to escape a president a fellow must quit the country altogether — or rot down four years until he takes another go at the vote booth.

And if the scalawag wins reelection?

Then our wretch voter must endure another four years under occupation — for a total of eight.

There is politics for you.

Now contrast the political system with the market system…

Voting in the Marketplace Is Entirely Different

Free markets — authentically free markets — lack entirely the violent combats central to politics.

They are scenes of peace, tolerance and justice.

Let us draw a parallel case to our previous example of candidates X and Y.

A Coca-Cola holds itself out before the American people.

This candidate claims to be the “real thing.” “Vote for me,” it says.

Behind another podium stands a Pepsi.

“No. Vote for me,” counters this fellow. Drink me “for the love of it.”

Each cries his case before voters.

This fickle and capricious voter pulls the lever for Coke. Or he pulls the lever for Pepsi.

He opens his wallet for the one or the other.

Does his vote injure, usurp or ruffle the opposing voter? Does he club the other voter over the head… as he does in politics?

In no way, no shape, no form.

Satisfied Voters

A voter for either brand is a satisfied voter. Neither has any care to impose his preference upon the other or deny him his soft drink of choice.

Multiply this one example countless times and in countless directions… and you have a picture of majestic electoral peace.

McDonald’s versus Burger King, Honda versus Ford, Nike versus Adidas, Walmart versus Target… it is all one.

A vote for any of them is peaceful as a dove. This voter on the free and open market holds no gun to the other voter’s ribs.

When he votes in politics — conversely — he does hold a gun to the other’s ribs.

He seeks to impose his preferences upon the other fellow who does not wish to be imposed upon.

To pull a lever is to pull a trigger.

Red State vs. Blue State

Chain a red-state American to a blue-state American. Force them to vote between any product on the free and open market.

The blue-state voter may razz the red-stater’s ghastly and barbarian tastes. The red-state voter may in turn razz the blue-stater’s effete and supercilious tastes.

Yet neither attempts to dragoon or bayonet the other. Each is free to vote his own way, as he might.

And so peace prevails between them.

But give them the choice of Trump versus Hillary or Trump versus Biden.

They will fall into savage combat  as the Kilkenny cats fell into savage combat.

One will win. One will lose.

We must therefore conclude the free market’s voting system is vastly superior to political voting.

A vote in the marketplace is a “win, win” deal.

What is politics then but a colossal “win, lose” deal?

And market voting improves the world in ways large and small…

Voting in the Free Market Improves the World

Each business must compete for the consumer’s vote. That vote harms no one, as we have established.

It also benefits many. It benefits many because a vote sends a signal.

It tells the outvoted to field an improved product — or take the consequences. And an improved product lifts this world that much higher.

If a business fails the market’s harsh and ruthless voting, it falls into bankruptcy… and goes away.

Is There Any Alternative to Politics?

Do I propose an alternative to the political arrangement?

No — not earnestly. I diagnose a disorder. I do not prescribe a cure.

I have previously held out the relative virtues of monarchy to jab cherished democratic theories.

Yet I certainly do not expect — nor do we propose — a return to monarchy.

But you say we are a republic, not a democracy. It is the best we can do in this fallen world of sin and evil.

Just so. I will not argue. Yet as French historian François Guizot said of republics:

“I have no use for a republic that begins with Plato… and ends necessarily with a policeman.”

Regards,

Brian Maher

for Freedom Financial News