Whoops.

A litte bit of knowledge without proper context is a dangerous thing, sorry if I came off as an ass.

Moderators: Alyrium Denryle, Edi, K. A. Pital
Monarchy is anachronism, but like other have said the European monarchs have no say in actual politics. Many monarchs don't have any power even in principle because of constitutional changes enacted in the 20th century. The British monarch does have some theoretical power, but if she tried to use it even a little bit, there would be a political shitstorm.Todeswind wrote:True enough but I find the institution of monarchy, even one serving as a tourist attraction to be anachronistic. The UK is perhaps not the best example of this, the Kingdom of Jordan is perhaps closer to a functioning example of what I was referring to.
Perhaps a better example would be the Japanese parliamentary system that spent the better part of the past 50 years locked in single party control.
My overall point, that political systems tend to resist change at all costs, stands.
The real problem would be redesigning the government to function without the presidency: to turn ourselves into a parliamentary democracy we'd have to restructure the top level of every government agency and radically reshape the habits and thinking of the upper-level government bureaucracy, who are used to dealing with a semi-autocratic president, not a prime minister.Terralthra wrote:It is not literally impossible to change the Presidential nature of the system. All it would take is a constitutional amendment heavily amending Article II, passed by a super-majority of both houses and ratified by a super-majority of states. That's highly unlikely, even figuratively impossible, but it is not literally impossible.
...And you're being an idiot, unless you're smart enough to know what you're saying is idiotic, which I suppose is possible. You're missing three very important points, all of which are utterly obvious.Stark wrote:What are you talking about? Don't get tribal because your system is inferior. Here I was thinking democracy was about sovereignty deriving from the people, and not 'wah wah wah what if your system was broken'. If you idiots hadn't made presidents deities you wouldn't have these problems.Simon_Jester wrote:I mean come on, if it was the reverse and it was parliamentary democracy having the structural problems, don't try and tell me it would be easy to convince the Commonwealth nations to abandon it in favor of something else.Unless you think coming up with a workable definition of 'corruption' or 'bribery' that will be made law is remotely practical...
Stark wrote: Why? Your system is structurally broken. Bakustra is right in that it's nigh-impossible to fix (largely due to attitudes like yours and the very structural problems themselves) but the answer to 'democracy implemented badly' is not 'blame those damn corporations'.
The problems of one-party rule in presidential democracies are separate from the deadlocked-two-party problem we have.Bakustra wrote:Simon, parliamentary and semi-presidential systems do have problems. But their problems are distinct from those of presidential systems. If you look at presidential republics worldwide, few of them are stable or have been. Mexico was under one-party rule for most of this century, South Korea similarly, even the US was single-party for brief periods. We even exported much of our government to the Philippines, and they've had severe problems with stability and maintaining democracy since. The most stable countries have been parliamentary or semi-presidential. Correlation does not imply causation, but we have one stable presidential republic, and many stable parliamentary republics, with significantly fewer semi-presidential republics than either.
I think you'd find it easier to create anti-corporatist sentiment than to create sentiment in favor of abolishing the presidency.As for bribery, the problem is that the average American is highly corporatist, Simon. They get angry at the influence of "special interest groups", but the solutions are considered to be too restrictive of corporate rights and alternatives are shut down by the mainstream media, which is itself highly corporatist thanks to its dependence on advertising. NPR and PBS are not corporatist to the same extent, but they are minorities that come under regular attack. Creating a sea change in the USA would be needed either to significantly reduce corporate influence or to restructure the Constitution. While it can be debated as to whether they are quite identical, they are still similar problems.