Aaron wrote:How is it that folks who champion an American style system can say with a straight face that a Constitutional Monarchy is worse when countries like Britain, Canada and the Netherlands all enjoy far more freedom and rights then our American cousins? Do we effectively have a second and third class of citizens (gays, illegals)? Do we have free speech zones? Do we have a gulag?
You know, I can't actually recall meeting anyone who says this...
Stark wrote:I think it's the different view of the executive. Having a ceremonial head of state, with elected executive below that, is quite different to the American elect-a-king system. I don't even think the American system does a very good job of separating the branches of government, but they're taught that they do.
In theory we do, and back in the early days of the republic the dividing lines were pretty clear. The branches were never balanced, but they were separate.
Today, the party system has taken over to the point where the divisions between the branches are meaningless- all that really matters is whether Republicans or Democrats are running a given body, because all Republicans cooperate with all Republicans in office and... well, that doesn't work so well for Democrats these days, but that's because they suck, not because of the system.
Originally, Congress had most of the power, the president had a lot of power, and the Supreme Court had
no power (well, almost none). Then the Supreme Court asserted its own power to strike down unconstitutional laws (which is not written anywhere in the original document), which gave them a little power around 1808. And for just about the last 200 years we've seen a steady flow of power from the divided legislature to the unified executive branch, with results we now see: the president has most of the power, Congress has most of what's left over when the President's had all he wants, and the Supreme Court still has only
a little power, except under unusual circumstances where their decisions have very far reaching consequences.
The stuff Typo is saying, with 'checks and balances preserve liberty' etc, is just highschool civics stuff in the US, right? Government self-propaganda?
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