I am afraid I am going to have to quote this whole epic failure from kaninelupus
"Epic failure"?? Because I could actually construct a well thought out dialogue as to why I disagreed with you?? Would you rather I simply used the tactics you have used throughout this "discussion" and simply call you a moron??
In this [l]and things are different of what your personal philosophy thinks the rest of the World should abide by.
We believe in "No taxation without representation."
What you "believe" in and what your legal system actually support are really two different things!! As to the rest of your tired old drivel, it's really not worth responding to.
Well, it doesn't, but this actually goes more to the heart of my concern. Both history and psychology agree that people in exalted positions tend to come to believe that they know better than the rest of us about almost everything - and at that point they become dangerous.
It is not unusual to hear this coming from Americans. But what is also unfortunately uncommon from Americans is the realisation that of ALL the truly democratic nations, you and your nation's citizens actually enjoy
less democratic freedoms than almost ANY other democratic nation. You get to
choose to vote for an elected representative, and you get the right to speak your mind and protest (just so long as the elected representitive doesn't find your comments or protests
too offensive, then even that right can disappear). If a President does a lousy job, he does one term. If a good job, two terms (even if thing change when the president gets a second run at things). It is almost impossible in your country to remove a defective president no matter how bad things get (with the exception of being impeached for serious breach of ethics or laws) - and thus you
assume the same is elsewhere.... and wrongly so.
Here is Australia (as with many other
truly democratic nations), we have the ability to retain a prime-minister for as long as he is doing the job well (or so long as the alternatives - yes there is more than one alternative - are d1cks). But that
doesn't give the elected leader (or even
any of the elected officials) reason to become complacent, or power hungry. Here, the ability to remove a defective, or "dangerous" leader is built into our political system, and as that power has in fact been used to remove "leaders" and lesser representatives before.
Also, the fact that like most democratic nations, voting is
compulsory (a fact I know the Yanks find hard to fathom), teaching our students from an early age about how our political system works is given much higher priority, thus creating a much more informed public.
As an edit, what I also forgot to mention, is that a prime-minister simply does not have the almost absolute power your President enjoys. Like most democratic nations, the Prime-minister
cannot simply decree a law or political policy at whim. Here, the senate actually has the power to block any decision the Prime-minister proposes. Thus there is a check-and-balance written right into our democratic/political system far beyond what the US enjoys.
Whilst I understand your concerns about the nature of using the term "Leader" in respect to your elected representatives, please do not blindly assume that all your concerns are global. As much as much of your country likes to think it leads the rest of the civilised and uncivilised world alike, you actually enjoy less legal and political freedoms than almost the rest of the democratic world.
@AIA - sorry, but that country of yours may not be so
grand as you like to think... but the rest of us already knew that!