What problems do people face in non democratic rule?
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The problems faced by citizens of a non-democratic country are considerable, and sometimes fatal.
"Non-democratic," by definition, implies an autocratic or dictatorial form of government, such as existed in the Soviet Union and across Eastern Europe during the Cold War, and in countries like North Korea, Venezuela and Cuba today. (For purposes of discussion, I'll omit war-torn quasi- or non-democratic governments in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan.) In countries ruled by dictators, either a political party like the Communist Party of China or by individuals like the late Fidel Castro in Cuba or the ruling Kim family in North Korea, the people can either submit to all forms of oppression, or suffer the consequences of dissidence—real or perceived—by being thrown into brutal prison camps and tortured and starved to death, or by being summarily executed with a bullet to the back of the head.
"Non-democratic," by definition, implies an autocratic or dictatorial form of government, such as existed in the Soviet Union and across Eastern Europe during the Cold War, and in countries like North Korea, Venezuela and Cuba today. (For purposes of discussion, I'll omit war-torn quasi- or non-democratic governments in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan.) In countries ruled by dictators, either a political party like the Communist Party of China or by individuals like the late Fidel Castro in Cuba or the ruling Kim family in North Korea, the people can either submit to all forms of oppression, or suffer the consequences of dissidence—real or perceived—by being thrown into brutal prison camps and tortured and starved to death, or by being summarily executed with a bullet to the back of the head.
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