Not surprisingly, this assertion kicked up quite a lively debate from his readers (the biggest in a while) on the question of whether travel to
a non-democratic country is in fact immoral (or at least unjustifiable).
Not exact matches
It
is unclear whether this division occurs at a national level,
in which case campaigns to «export democracy» to
non-democratic nations
are probably futile, or whether the division
is at the individual level —
in which case it
is debatable that all leaders
in the West can
be said to
be democratic crusaders, especially where other
countries are concerned.
Since most
Non-Democratic Republic
countries are in the Middle East / Africa, they have profited well from oil so we can't really rely on that.
One of the last democratic
countries in Central Europe, Czech Republic,
was the first to fall victim to
non-democratic neighbors.
However,
in democracies there
are comparatively few of these excluded groups, so that the digital discrimination found
in the study
is mainly a problem
in non-democratic countries.