I think politics are in us, inherently. Every men and women has political instinct that controlled in our limbic system of our brain, called reptile part as remaining process of our evolutionary process. The limbic order us to run or fight, tradeoff, survival (eat, drink), manipulating other when we are in danger, etcetera. So, I think the question is not whether "stupid" or "not stupid" but what kind of person dominant's structure of the brain, those the limbic dominant or those the neocortex (nurture, superego) dominant.
Surely it can. It was Neocortex structure which can differ us from other primates. Neocortex structure impact our comprehend to fields like art, morality, ethics, science, and so on. Neocortex sparring with Limbic structure in order to directed or pressed. This process was called nurture which Neocortex was predominant, the opposite was called nature which Limbic predominantly. If a politician was "Neocortex" one, then he or she gain a lot of morality's problem much more than "Limbic" one.
One may view another's decision to be apolitical as an inherently political stance. There are also many different types of politics. The formal politics of a state for instance may vastly differ from the micropolitics of an institution like a school.
Deadly Nepal protests reflect a wider pattern of Gen Z political activism across Asia
Earlier this week, thousands of mainly young people in Nepal took to the streets in mass protests triggered by the government’s decision to ban 26 social media platforms.
Some 22 people died and hundreds were injured within in a few hours in the clashes between protesters and police.
Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli and his cabinet ministers resigned in the face of growing public outrage and widespread criticism, both domestically and internationally, over the protesters’ deaths.
Provoked by the deaths of the protesters on September 8, angry, young demonstrators burned down several government buildings across the country, including the parliament and supreme court.
Several politicians’ residences were also set on fire, while leaders of major political parties went into hiding...
Perhaps Nepal can take a lesson from Bangladesh’s recent experience, where young protesters stepped in to help form an interim government, under the leadership of Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus.
Despite the challenges ahead, the uprising has provided a historic opportunity to fix Nepal’s broken government system. But real change depends on how power shifts from the old guard to new leaders, and whether they can address the structural and systemic issues that drove young people to the streets.