Voluntary association, so, yes.Stuart Mackey wrote:
Guilt by association eh?
You are your government. Though, in the case of Australia, I grant that this is debateable (it could be argued that the powers of your State are derived from the Monarch and simply allowed to be exercised by the people). However, in the case of a Democratic-Republic--it is very clear that the Sovereignty of the State is collective. You chose to participate in the State, and you hold part of the sovereignty and the sovereign powers--with them, the responsibilities.If my government does something that is reprehensible, I can not stop it.
Yes, but how can you vote in the first place? Because you are in a system where power is devolved to the people, that's how. The power of war and peace, among them. You are simply choosing people to exercise the power you possess for you. It is still your power--and your responsibility. Captains go to jail for things the crewmen on their ships do. Our elected officials are called Civil Servants for a very specific reason.I can vote against it in the next election and vote for a government that will rectify the situation.
But you cannot punish a nation for the actions of a few people who gave the orders to do something because those people commited no crime, indeed they had no part in the makng of a criminal offence, it is illogical to punish the many for the actions of the few.
But those people were selected by the people--who are the government--according to the legal system accepted by the people, in a system in which the people Are the State and make the State decisions via the process of the selection of representative civil servants. The responsibility still rests on the people as a whole--we're the ones who allow the system to exist, support it, and apportion our powers according to this central concept. The legal concepts simply are a method for choosing the servants who represent us in the management of our State's operation.
No, but you should absolutely hold the whole population of Texas so responsible.Should I hold the entire people of America responcible for the people that Bush had executed in Texas?
Yes, but we're not discussing law, here, we're discussing morality.
The details, however is what make you criminal or not.
No, the essence of democracy is that the State's people are sovereign as a whole instead of a single individual. That is democracy--the devolution of power from a monarch to the whole of the populace. You don't change your government in democracy because you are the government.The essence of democracy is its freedoms and the ability of a people to peaceably change its government should it displease them.
These are simply the civil servants of the government, which is the people, who have the sovereign powers of the whole state.But it is the government who is made of individuals who give the orders, and with that power comes the responsibility of success or failure, reward or punishment, and it is in these details that the people give government the responibility for its actions.
Again, the government in the democratic (or more precisely democratic-republican) system is the whole populace. I grant that the modern constitutional monarchy creates an interesting and unique situation. The government as the people does indeed decide everything--through a legally established method of choosing civil servants. But the legal quibbles are not the important part. We are discussing morality and the morality is clear; the people are the government and the people participate in a system which selects the leaders who exercise their sovereign rights, including the rights of War and Peace.People may elect, but it is Government that must deside and it is that very power to deside that imparts responcibility for a nations actions to that government.