K
keith
Guest
On Tue, 05 Apr 2005 21:41:26 +0100, John Woodgate wrote:
democracy. In the case of the United States, it was quite intentional.
Democracies were seen, rightly, as quite ugly things.
choosing the executive, not the people. See: amendment XXVII (above).
Without the Senate, and by extension the Electoral College the small
states would be totally forgotten.
--
Keith
Sure. Even I knew that. ;-) The point is that neither countries are aI read in sci.electronics.design that Keith Williams <krw@att.bizzzz
wrote (in <MPG.1cbcbcc87aecb2f89899a5@news.individual.net> about 'OT:
Civil War Narrowly Averted in Schiavo Case', on Tue, 5 Apr 2005:
Clearly a "democracy" was never intended by the FF. The United States
was quite intentionally set up to be a republic. Until Amendment XVII
(1913) "the people" didn't vote for senators.
That's quite normal for a bicameral parliament, in fact those that have
a popular suffrage for both chambers are rather rare. In UK, we still
don't vote for members of the upper chamber.
democracy. In the case of the United States, it was quite intentional.
Democracies were seen, rightly, as quite ugly things.
Not at all. The United States is just that. It's about the statesOf course, US actually has a soviet system for presidential elections.
(;-)
choosing the executive, not the people. See: amendment XXVII (above).
Without the Senate, and by extension the Electoral College the small
states would be totally forgotten.
--
Keith