Jan 29, 2009

Pacific Pariah's and Alarmist Fools

All 3 of the above idiots deserve the heading Pariah's & Fools. Great article follows :

Pariah of the Pacific

Paul Toohey | January 29, 2009

Article from: The Australian

FIJI'S self-appointed interim Prime Minister, Frank Bainimarama, is a conundrum. He claims to dream of a united, tolerant and prosperous nation where the indigenous Fijian majority and the Indian minority live together in peace. He wants to reform the electoral process and guide his country to parliamentary democracy.

On the other hand, Bainimarama seems to lack the self-awareness that might remind him that he is a dictator. He stole government by coup in late 2006. Bainimarama doesn't refer to it as a coup. He calls it "an intervention from the Fiji military forces". In early 2007 he promised there would be full elections by March this year. Deadlines to prepare for these elections have come and gone.

Bainimarama's promise of returning Fiji to democracy has failed to materialise. He has installed military buddies in senior ministries, caused Fiji's partial suspension from the commonwealth and has earned censure and "smart" sanctions, such as visa denials, from Fiji's biggest regional aid providers, Australia and New Zealand.

Bainimarama has also attracted the attention of the UN, which has hinted at expelling Fiji from various peacekeeping missions across the globe, and has said that no Fijian troops will be included in any new missions until the country holds elections. There are 3500 soldiers on overseas missions or on secondment, none of whom would thank Bainimarama if they lost their well-paid jobs.

Fiji has long had a proud if oversized military, which has given the country much prestige. That prestige is now non-existent. The Fijian military has shown a repeated propensity to break its country's trust by crashing heavily into politics.

Bainimarama addressed the UN General Assembly in 2007 and 2008 with what appeared to be erudite speeches dedicated to peace and democracy but which were, ultimately, impossibly contradicted. Bainimarama is a prime minister without a parliament, ruling instead with the assistance of a dozen interim ministers but, sitting above them, a military council made up of senior officers.

Observers believe there is no plausible sign of any group forming within Fiji's military to oust Bainimarama and return Fiji to democracy; and even if such a group did exist, diplomats would argue another coup would not be in the country's interests. All they want is for Bainimarama to hold an election.

Perversely, Fiji saw one of its best tourism years in 2008, helped along by large numbers of Australians attracted to heavily discounted travel deals. The strong travel warnings issued by the Australian Government advising visitors to exercise extreme caution in Fiji, and to watch out for political events and personal attacks, appear to have been ignored. But Fijians are living in isolation and fear. Anecdotally, there has been a sharp rise in muggings and late-night home invasions by an emerging criminal culture born partly out of desperation, and partly out of clear signals from Fiji's military command, whose message has been: if you want it, take it.

Fiji is a founding member of the Pacific Islands Forum, designed to promote goodwill and prosperity among the Melanesian and Polynesian brotherhood, with Australia and NZ playing a cashed-up, avuncular - some of these tiny member nations would say patronising and overbearing - role.

A special leaders' meeting was convened for Port Moresby on Tuesday to attempt to force Bainimarama to hold elections. Bainimarama didn't attend, claiming he had too much to do at home with his country devastated by flood. It was a ruse to avoid a humiliating lecture, and Bainimarama instead sent his interim Attorney-General, Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum.

Because Sayed-Khaiyum is not a leader, he was not allowed a seat at the forum. He was instead called to the floor to face a grilling from leaders including Kevin Rudd, who was disturbed to note a media report from Fiji on Monday in which Bainimarama said a general election could be as long as 10 years away.

Australia is sorely unimpressed with Bainimarama, and things got personal when its high commissioner to Fiji, James Batley, received four death threats last year: one hand-delivered, the rest in the mail. These threats, coming after the expulsion of NZ's high commissioner, were considered credible, in that they showed knowledge of Batley's movements around the capital, Suva.

It does not necessarily follow that there was any real intention to kill Batley, one of Australia's most respected diplomats. But Australia believes the threats came from the military leadership and reveal its dark, petty heart. Not surprisingly, a police investigation has not been able to source the threats. Bainimarama controls the police.

In his welcoming speech at the forum, Papua New Guinea's Prime Minister Michael Somare pleaded with the 15 sitting member PIF nations not to impose punitive sanctions that would damage ordinary Fijians. Smaller island nations such as Tuvalu and Kiribati rely on Fiji for their air links, and are likewise concerned that Bainimarama could lash out and cut their links to the world.

Australia did not go into the leaders' meeting demanding Fiji be expelled from the forum. Such a position would be difficult to turn back from and, even if justified, would not play well with other member nations, particularly the sensitive New Guineans, who consider Fiji part of the region's Melanesianbrotherhood.

PNG is also in the process of embracing Rudd, as he is embracing them, after many bad years with John Howard and Alexander Downer, whom Somare - the region's longest-serving leader, known locally as the grand chief - feels did not accord him the respect to which he believes he is entitled.

Australia has avoided imposing trade sanctions on Fiji, instead denying Australian visas to all senior Fijian military and their families, members of the interim Government and senior appointees of that Government. While this has good annoyance value, Australia has no desire to crush ordinary Fijians.

Australia gives Fiji an annual $27 million in aid, but that has now dropped by 20 per cent, not because of any financial sanctions, but because that money was intended for law and justice programs. Australia believes it is pointless to fund such programs in the present environment, but continues its health and education programs.

Diplomatic capital is an intangible but real asset. Fiji's has fully eroded. Bainimarama has talked about a "look-north" policy - meaning China - which would mean less reliance on Australian and NZ aid. The reality is that he - or, more to the point, Fijian people - need Australia and NZ. China is probably not thinking too much about heavy investment in small Pacific islands. Even if it were, China, like everyone else, would rather deal with leaders who had credibility.

Australian authorities believe Bainimarama's thugs have pulled Fijian citizens into military headquarters for beatings. A judge's house was burned to the ground. Before his coup, Bainimarama was under investigation for the murders of five soldiers in the 2000coup. That matter seems to have gone away, for now. Bainimarama has also been emboldened by a recent decision of a single judge of the Fiji High Court that decreed Fiji's president had the power to appoint the interimGovernment.

Three senior newspaper figures have been bullied and expelled from the country in the past year. The latest, Fiji Times publisher Rex Gardner, was given his marching orders this week. Rudd, talking in Port Moresby this week, said the coup had rendered Fijians voiceless. "I believe anyone who is deprived of their democratic voice, anyone who is deprived of fundamental freedoms of the press - and for goodness sake, look what happened with the publisher of the Fiji Times today - is deprived of the lifeblood of being in a normal democratic community."

Bainimarama's mantra is that Fiji's sick electoral process should be fixed before there can be any election. The system guarantees that a certain number of seats must go to Fijians, and that others must go to Indians. He sees it as unrepresentative, and he's no doubt right. On the other hand, he claims his own coup gave him a mandate to rule. Bainimarama has promoted a people's charter, which he claims is his first step to electoral reform and "Fiji's own way of addressing its problems". As part of the process, Fijians were asked to fill out feedback forms on which they had to provide their names and addresses. The interim Government claimed the forms showed Fijians overwhelmingly gave their blessing for Bainimarama to embark on electoral reform before holding an election.

Bainimarama says his objective "is to rebuild Fiji into a non-racial, culturally vibrant, united, well-governed, truly democratic nation that seeks progress and prosperity".

He claims he staged the coup to end a strongly indigenous Fijian government that was, as he rightly claims, seeking to entrench Fijian rights over the Indian minority. He makes sense with his argument that it's a dead end for Fiji to pursue an ultra-indigenous policy line. But he does not seem to realise that no one asked him to install himself as prime minister. Even if a credible electoral system were to be introduced in Fiji, the demographic balance has now swung so far in favour of indigenous Fijians that they would retain a comfortable majority anyway.

So why not just hold an election and let the cards fall where they may? Bainimarama, having illegally taken government, no longer has the courage to take his ideas to the people. If he went to the polls tomorrow in a fair election, the government he ousted would probably be returned in a flash. Bainimarama is stalling for time and is trying to work himself out of a corner, and quite possibly a long prison sentence.

The PIF leaders issued an edict on Tuesday that required Bainimarama to announce an election date by May 1, and to hold elections before year's end. If not, it would be suspended from the forum. This might not seem a stern measure but Rudd stressed it was the unanimous decision of all Pacific leaders. It was agreed that if Bainimarama ignored the communique, financial sanctions would follow. But the most powerful message from Tuesday was that Fiji is now politically isolated in the region, and therefore the world.

That the threat of suspension stung was evidenced by Sayed-Khaiyum's reaction. He had been sent from the room as leaders discussed their measures and seemed stunned at the demand for elections. He launched into a diatribe against Australia and NZ, accusing them of leaning on smaller member nations.

Australia's strong wish is to break the coup culture and return Fiji to what it once was, the cornerstone of the Pacific. To achieve that, Bainimarama is slowly being suffocated of the sense of legitimacy he craves.

Jan 20, 2009

Fiji's Disaster

(With apologies to the cartoon artist who shall remain nameless in case he finds himself on the Fiji Gestapo's stasi list when next on a holiday to Fiji)

Jan 13, 2009

The Fiji Flooding

This is a very bad one esp for the Eastern and Western Divisions.

In the past few days I have seen many people left with nothing except for the clothes on their backs.

The Red Cross is doing a wonderful job, and those of us who are fortunate enough to have a few cents lying around should donate to either the Fiji Times appeal:

Go into any ANZ bank : Fiji Flood Appeal account (No. 10087832). The bank will issue you a receipt.

OR Phone the Fiji Red Cross Society directly on
331 4133 or go and see them in Suva at 22 Gorrie Street in Suva, or here in Lautoka phone Emosi Sakaturu: 666 4072 or go and see them at 1 Vomo Street, Lautoka or if you are in Labasa phone the Labasa peple on 881 1139 or 881 8628.

Vinaka vakalevu to all those overseas govts that have donated to the Non Government Organisations for disaster relief.

People can be assured that in the hands of the Red Cross etc, these funds are transparent and will be accountable, unlike
the illegal regime's fund for devious means and allsorts; speaking of which, it is best not to donate to Bainimarama's disasterous fund as that purse goes into the bottomless Military Regime kitty for teams of insignificant individuals doing needless tours around the country with no purpose except to irritate the kutusebe.

Jan 7, 2009

No Reason - Reason Nai

As the makabunas say .... but why ?

LISTEN TO THIS

More expenses , no one to administer infrastructure ... how frightening. So why do we pay our rates ?

And whats the bet that we see more Military Fat Cat Officers benefit? And in the meantime overseas Aid to the tune of $8 Million that would have benefitted us in our communities go begging. Shame !

Fiji Local Government members forced to vacate office

Updated Tue Jan 6, 2009

Representatives of Fiji's municipal governments want the interim government to either delay, or dismiss a decision to force their elected leaders to vacate office at the end of January. Last year the interim government decided to shorten local government terms from four to three years, at which time councillors and mayors will have to vacate office. The deadline is the end of the month.

Pacific Correspondent Campbell Cooney

Jan 6, 2009

How to Recognise an Authoritarian - PART IV

And in the final Chapter:

17. TRUST NO ONE


No authoritarian can depend on anyone, lest some of their accrued power slip away from them. They must then insist on absolute obedience as the prerequisite for continued favor. By eliminating individual initiative, the authoritarian creates a well-honed political machine.

But authoritarian "trust" is based purely on continued right-think (obedience to the autocrat). Dissenters must always be swiftly purged.

18. NEVER COMPROMISE

Authoritarians have colossal egos, and rely on their enormous self-confidence for sustenance. Thus, they see compromise as weakness. The authoritarian idea of "compromise" is you accepting their proposition, rather than them accepting yours. It's a one-way street.

19. ANYONE WHO ISN'T WITH YOU IS AGAINST YOU

Obedience is what authoritarians expect from others. They are absolutely intolerant of dissenting views, and will view anyone who disagrees with them unfavorably. There are only two classes of people to the authoritarian -- followers and enemies. If you aren't the former, you must be the latter.

Much of this stems from their utilitarian ethos. If they can't use or manipulate you, then you are their enemy. Authoritarians believe there is their way of doing things, and the wrong way of doing things.

20. NEITHER FORGIVE NOR FORGET

The successful authoritarian avoids cooperation and reciprocity whenever possible, because these are the traits of a weakling. If you must appear to cooperate, feign it, but don't take it to heart.

Your purpose is to favorably leverage yourself against everyone else, so you must not let any slights go unpunished, lest you be put in a position of weakness relative to your rivals.


21. GET MAD AND GET EVEN

If someone has the nerve to cross you, get fired up. Positively explode with rage. This works wonders with regard to quelling dissent in your group, as it creates the necessary fear which is the grease that keeps an authoritarian machine running smoothly. Fear works wonders in soliciting obedience, so the more you're questioned or challenged, the more tantrums you should throw!

These tantrums are a result of the rest of the world failing to see that the would-be leader is infallible, which produces enormous frustration in the autocrat-in-training. They know they're perfect, but when you don't see it, they get so mad!

22. AVOID HUMOR

Humor of any form is anti-authoritarian, because it pokes fun at the sacred and untouchable, and provides a satisfying release of emotion in the seditious form of laughter. Autocrats are a humorless breed. They take themselves very seriously, and if you laugh at them, they will hate you for it.

The only permissible jokes for the would-be authoritarian are those that are at others' expense -- jokes which demean, denigrate, or humiliate others. They like those kinds of jokes; anything else is not to be tolerated. Make no mistake: humor and merriment is seditious -- it erodes authority.

23. THAT WHICH CAN'T BE USED IS USELESS

Autocrats are utilitarians; they judge good and bad in terms of that which they can use and that which they cannot use. This explains why they shift alliances so often -- why today's trusted comrade is tomorrow's political exile! When you are no longer useful to the authoritarian, you are bad.

Ergo, anything which they cannot use, manipulate, twist, or distort, is useless, and must be done away with entirely. They won't phrase it that way, course, but will seek to appeal to "reason." Witness the Qarase court ruling (Fiji Times PDF) as a very good example of this. And Aiyass's continued harping about how the regime is so "misunderstood".

That's why authoritarians gut democracy whenever it rears its "ugly head" -- popular self-rule is absolutely useless to an aspiring despot, so it's to be rendered ineffectual at the earliest possibility, lest things get out of hand!
________

So ragone, there you have it ..... Reading between the lines like Driti does everyday, I think Baini seems to be wanting to hang onto his throne for quite a while yet hmmmm ? .... I am yet to be convinced otherwise.

How to Recognise an Authoritarian - PART III

Part III as follows :

11. IGNORE WHAT YOU CAN'T REFUTE


In instances where an authoritarian is caught in a bad situation, the best course of action is to ignore the accusation whenever possible.

If contrary evidence is offered, ignore it. Follow the preceding tactic to silence the questioner and to discourage further inquiry.

12. ACCEPT PRAISE, ASSIGN BLAME

You succeed, others fail.

A simple but time-honored practice of the authoritarian. When someone else does a good thing, take the credit for it to boost your status. When you do a bad thing, blame it on someone else!

If someone else has a good idea the authoritarian didn't think of, the best response is for the authoritarian to take that idea for their own, and thereby take the credit and weaken their enemy.

13. NEVER ADMIT YOU'RE WRONG

The successful authoritarian will never, ever admit they're wrong, because doing so shows fallibility, and no authoritarian can risk admitting that they're fallible. The Fascists of Italy had a slogan, "Mussolini is always right" -- which nicely captures this idea.

To the authoritarian, only a weakling admits they're wrong, because anything less than perfection (which they embody, of course), to the authoritarian, is damning. They consider themselves perfect beings, and get all nervous when their human fallibility is revealed to them.

14. WHEN YOU ARE WRONG, BLAME EVERYONE BUT YOURSELF

If you've really screwed up, the last thing a would-be autocrat wants to do is accept blame for the wrongdoing. Find a scapegoat, any scapegoat, and blame them for your screwup.

15. INSIST ON IDEOLOGICAL CONFORMITY

Ideological conformity is the fuel from which authoritarianism springs, by eliminating the natural human impulse to rebel against that which is contrary to their reason or experience.

By insisting on such conformity, the would-be leader creates followers, an essential component. These are people who then depend on the leader for guidance and instruction, which, for the authoritarian, is a highly desirable situation to be in.


While building power within an organization, the best way to do this is to brand wrong-thinkers (e.g., anyone who questions the would-be leader) traitors, spies, or provocateurs, and have them expelled from the organization. Such successive purges will create a homogenous, ideologically conformist movement and serve as a lesson to those few free thinkers who may still remain.

Dissent and diversity is considered weakness to the authoritarian, and will be opposed and fought at every turn, although they won't say that's what they're doing.

16. WEAR A UNIFORM

Uniforms and authority go way back. Authoritarians love symbols, because they create emotional responses in those who see them.

A uniform has always been a powerful symbol -- it allows you to transcend your everyday self and assume a role or persona. Like any costume, it masks your true self.

Any good authoritarian will seek to create a uniform, and stick to it. Authoritarians a very image-conscious. Also, it's important to insist that your followers wear such a uniform as well, to show that they're suitably conformist.


Look around for uniforms, and you'll find authoritarians. Of course cops and soldiers, but also business execs, and Marxists -- remember those snappy Red Army uniforms of decades past? Sadly even the shalwar kameez uniforms of the Shameem sisters have become a sinister symbol of this regime in some quarters.

The point of a uniform is symbolic abstraction -- you stop being you and become an it, part of something larger than yourself.
_______

Part IV coming up ......

How to Recognise an Authoritarian - PART II

As promised luvequ's, we continue our talanoa :

7. CREATE THE NEED FOR YOUR SERVICES


This is an old advertising saying -- where a need doesn't exist, you create one. The authoritarian invokes ideas about "necessity" and "accountability" & "transparency"to justify concentrating power in their few hands. Where have we heard this before I wonder ?

Authoritarians always speak of "efficiency" and "effectiveness" when seeking to concentrate power in themselves. They pretend that this is forced on them, when in fact they desire it.

No successful authoritarian will use any language other than that of necessity as they erode your power to think and act. To do otherwise is to expose themselves for what they are.

8. GATHER FOLLOWERS

This is so important it almost goes without saying. The autocrat seeks power, and power means followers. The authoritarian without followers is just another nutcase with bad ideas.

So the would-be leader must create dependence in order to bring people into the fold. To that end, the leader will not seek to facilitate personal growth among others, but instead promote dependence.

Witness all the army officers that have had so called "backpay" awarded to them. Villagers that have laid down at the feet of the regime on being told that they are to benefit from a bridge, new roads or a new church. Shameless ! And they don't realise they are being bought.

Authoritarians are very willing to offer their services to you, although they do so not to help you, but rather to help themselves.

9. LIE, LIE, LIE

The accomplished authoritarian must be able to lie with ease and with gusto. If you can't lie, deceive, and mislead, you might as well give up trying to be an authoritarian -- the nature of acquisition of power demands it of you.

If you want to be a would-be leader, you might want to practice lying, until you get the hang of it.

10. USE VIOLENCE WHENEVER YOU CAN GET AWAY WITH IT

Violence and authoritarianism go hand in hand. Violence, in all its forms, is the tool of choice for dealing with those who get in your way.

And there are different types of violence, to be used at different stages of power. Before attaining power, the authoritarian must rely on verbal abuse -- personal attacks, designed to quell dissent and silence opposition.

Later, once they're in power, the authoritarian will have a coercive apparatus, whether thugs, police, or troops, who will then be used to carry out physical and pyschological violence on dissenters.
___________

PART III on it's way .....

Jan 4, 2009

How to Recognise an Authoritarian - PART I

Happy New year Fiji. I begin this year with renewed spirit especially after hearing that we now have an official "Back to Democracy Movement". I have been giving much thought to the patterns emerging with the Regime that is hell bent on sinking Fiji, and with the help of faithful email correspondents who have sent me some of what follows , I have put together some food for thought for you.

Here is the First Part .......

How to Recognise an Authoritarian - PART I

Authoritarians are basically people with low self-images.
They react to their own negative self-image by focusing on externalities.

They aggressively throw their weight around in an effort to disprove what they already know -- that they're stunted, empty people.

All the greatest autocrats of this century: Lenin, Trotsky, Stalin, Mussolini, Hitler, Mao, Pol Pot, Saddam, and others -- were ruthless, paranoid individuals who validated their low self-images through relentless pursuit and acquisition of power. There are countless more out there, too.

The authoritarian wants power, period. And they will do anything to get it. But the trick of their game is that they have to trick the rest of us into letting them get into power before they can consolidate their position - or take it if they can. Tyrants only sit secure if you let them.

Reliable sources tell us that Qarase's government recognised Frank's ambitions and were working to ensure that this critical early stage was never realized by working on legislation that would have downsized the army considerably. They were trying to destroy the means by which power was being concentrated by Bainimarama, the Army's power structure itself, and prevent it from resurfacing in newer, more insidious forms.


Make no mistake, Franky realising his power base was going to be taken from under him decided to consolidate his power base. He started with sacking all of those officers he deemed either had a brain or two and those would not bow down to him. He then cultivated the rest of the uneducated ones in the ranks.

Now, you be the judge - this is a list of what History's authoritarians have always done. Now put yourself in Dictator Frank's shoes and see if you recognise the following dummies guide to being an authoritarian, and see if you can follow what he is doing to our country ..................................

1. AFTER GETTING INTO POWER, DRAFT A SET OF RULES FOR EVERYONE ELSE TO FOLLOW

This is the single most important step for an authoritarian. You must draft a set of rules, laws, dictates, doctrines, and expect that everyone conforms to these. Manifestos do the job, but any form of political/ideological dogma will do. These include lovely words like "Decree, Committees, Charter, Reviews, Moving Forward, and "roadmap" to fool the public.

2. EXEMPT YOURSELF FROM THESE RULES

Nearly as important to drafting these rules is that you must exempt yourself from these rules. Otherwise, your freedom of action will be too constricted, which no authoritarian wants! So immunity is granted by Presidential Decree to the Military - all of them including the ones that murdered Rabaka, Verebasaqa & Malasebe.

Authoritarians want maximum options for themselves, minimum options for everyone else.

3. ALWAYS SAY THE OPPOSITE OF WHAT YOU MEAN

Absolutely vital. Use sweet words to mask horrible deeds, and use horrible words to describe good things. Examples of this abound. For example, when Franky says(many times) "so and so are not acting in the national interest. " -- what he really means is "not acting how I want them to act".

But he couldn't come out and say that beforehand, so he says again and again things like : we must move the country forward together " and " you must accept what has happened" and "don't listen to the few self-serving individuals who are pursuing their personal and political agendas" (helllllooooo !) , to hoodwink worker support into thinking what he is saying must be true.

No one will follow you if you say "I'm going to enslave you" -- so you have to say "I'm going to free you" and "lets move the country forward together " then tell them how, once you have their attention - like using security decrees "to keep the peace" and nice words such as "roadmap", and "implementation strategies".

Truth is invariably the enemy of the authoritarian, and must be avoided, twisted, or warped at all costs. George Orwell's 1984 lines about "war is peace, freedom is slavery, ignorance is strength" perfectly illustrates this tactic. Using religion to enforce this distortion of the truth (ie Teleni's Bro as wanna be messiah) is so rampant in Fiji it takes a brave person to sift through this garbage and tell it like it is.

4. CENTRALIZE, CENTRALIZE, CENTRALIZE

Decentralization is invariably a threat to the authoritarian, as it disperses power.

So the authoritarian always seeks concentration of power in the fewest hands possible, most preferably their own. They will, then, act to ensure that decision-making power and initiative remains tightly focused, instead of broadly dispersed.

They will try to build structures in any organization which funnel and channel authority in their hands, although they will never say they're doing this . Good examples of this are : FICAC - the central anti-corruption gestapo unit, all the boards and authorities they have sacked good people from and placed their puppets in, and the pivotal roles within Law and Order - ie judiciary and Police to name a few, FIU and all the Ministries that Bhaini personally has in his hands (
Public Service, Charter, Information, Finance, National Planning, Foreign Affairs, International Co-operation and Civil Aviation.)

5. ALWAYS PROMOTE YOURSELF

The aspiring authoritarian wants most of all to become a leader; to become vital, necessary and important. (I saw Bainimarama up close and personal when announced as Fiji's PM at a recent function, and didnt his chest puff up like a kula in heat and his lips quiver with excitement at the thought that people were just worshipping at his feet. Woilei de mad dog !)

However, back at the ranch, the way to do that is through rigorous & shameless self-promotion.

They beat their own drums endlessly, and will seek to establish a reputation for themselves within a movement as a leader. They want recognition, and will do what they can to get it.

6. MAKE YOURSELF INDISPENSABLE

Related to the rampant self-promotion of the authoritarian is that they seek to bolster their low self-image by creating the cult of personality required for their leadership. They seek to make themselves the driving force, the lynchpin of any given movement, to the extent that if you took them out, the rest would fall into oblivion.

An effect of this is that founding left-wing authoritarians often build movements in their name... Marx begets Marxism, Stalin begets Stalinism, Mao begets Maoism. Bainimocracy in Fiji.

Usually you can only attain this demigod status after you've whipped your pet movement into line and smashed all dissenting voices like the media, womens voices, and if you can, the bloggers.
____________

BUT WAIT THERE'S MORE ... mataka ragone - Part II ....