Take that up with the Sec. of Education. Rumor has it Trump calls her Ditzy Devos. omg it's like a horror house of mirrors
Take that up with the Sec. of Education. Rumor has it Trump calls her Ditzy Devos. omg it's like a horror house of mirrors
With great difficulty. Focus on issues and concepts rather than on individual politicians or parties. Occasionally throw in an example of Obama or Clinton doing something stupid. Discuss how we can judge the credibility of news stories instead of taking them at face value. This is hardest in foreign policy classes where the best you can say about Trump's policies is they're following in the footsteps of previous bad policies.
Hope is the denial of reality
Being rivals or historically opposing each other is not at all the same as being opposites. I don't care how many worthless words you try and pile up on your side, your concept just does not work. You might as well be trying to declare that e is the opposite of pi. It's just not what the word opposite means.
Last night as I lay in bed, looking up at the stars, I thought, “Where the hell is my ceiling?"
How is that not the opposite of a monarchy?republic
rɪˈpʌblɪk/
noun
noun: republic; plural noun: republics
a state in which supreme power is held by the people and their elected representatives, and which has an elected or nominated president rather than a monarch.
Republic is to monarchy as atheism is to theism.
As best as I could tell:
The American definition of republic comes from the Romans. For the Romans, it meant a constitutional system with power split between different institutions to prevent any one (including the masses) from accumulating too much power. When Americans say the US isn't a democracy, they mean power of the masses is checked by other institutions.
The European definition of republic has evolved more over time. It started with the same Roman version, but moved on to include commercial oligarchies (Venice) and even dictatorships (Cromwell). By the 1600s at the latest, the term already meant rule that was on some level derived from the people (in contrast to rule derived from God).
It's quite possible that the Brits accepted the version that Americans ended up adopting. It would be a way to distinguish their constitution monarchy from that of absolute ones on the continent.
Hope is the denial of reality
I'm really curious as to what you base your claim to the Romans having a philosophy of divisions of power on. Not just the factual limits on power by doubling up positions but a real philosophy underpinning such a system. Barring that I see no reason for the distinctions between the concept of the Republic that you make.
The Romans were obsessed with the risk of the return of the monarchy, but did provide for the institution of a dictator in emergencies. Also there elections of every official in the state structure pointed more towards a confused system of direct democracy than a orderly system of separation of powers. Mos Maiorum, Senatus consultum, votes in the assembly and the vetos of the Tribunes made it more of a hotchpotch than a reasoned separation of powers.
Last edited by Hazir; 09-09-2018 at 03:45 PM.
Congratulations America
Eh? So your system is based on 'Roman practice' which it does not resemble rather than on the European Trias Politica which it almost follows to the letter?
I think the only problem here is that crazy American notion that a Republic isn't a democracy if it has boundaries limiting the free execution of the popular sovereignty.
That whole idea is nonsense; a democracy is any system of government that draws for its justification on the people as sovereign.
Your Constitution with its description of the government and its Bill of Rights falls perfectly under that definition. Your Constitution makes it blatantly clear in the threewords its preamble starts with : 'WE, the People'
Congratulations America
It's based on the Roman practice of having a lot of checks and balances, then totally ignoring them.
When the sky above us fell
We descended into hell
Into kingdom come
No
Congratulations America
The 18th century debate about government was pretty much the same in Europe as in America. The only truly American addition was the element of federalism.
Congratulations America
When Americans say the country is a Republic and not a Democracy, they're just repeating something they heard once that sounded like a fun fact they could repeat to sound educated. It doesn't impact anything real, so they never bothered to think about how a direct democracy is not the only form of democracy, and that all republics are democracies, but not all democracies are republics.
I'd bet if we could trace the origins back to the person who first said this before everyone started repeating it, it was probably said in a situation where the speaker wanted to be more specific than just "democracy" and the listeners misunderstood and started repeating it.
Fucking hell. Fine, the US doesn't have a direct democracy, it's a representative democracy, AKA a republic. Happy with that? And yep, from one angle it's all still democracy, say it again. Democracy sweet free fucking democracy in the US, yeah! But from another you maybe can see nobody votes directly for policy (on the Federal level anyway). They vote for people who are supposed to represent our interests when policy gets created and implemented. And one, but not the only, reason for that design is to curb/ safeguard us from too much direct democracy, because bad things like Trump can happen as a result of that. But the Trump bad thing happened anyway, so something's not working right somewhere in this system. Maybe it's the fault of the parties, maybe it's the broken design itself, maybe it's the propaganda run amok we're drowning in, but I think it's senseless to point at the voters and say "It's their fucking fault, you morons." We were supposed to be protected against our most self-destructive inclinations, weren't we? Republic, yo. Safeguards. Right? You'd think there would be someone in the Republican party somewhere with the influence and character to stand up and say this has to stop. But you'd be wrong, apparently. This Op-Ed guy is NOT that someone. He and his are self-serving cowards operating within the cracks of our broken system.
The Rules
Copper- behave toward others to elicit treatment you would like (the manipulative rule)
Gold- treat others how you would like them to treat you (the self regard rule)
Platinum - treat others the way they would like to be treated (the PC rule)
I feel like you have unreasonable expectations of your system. If you regularly end up with Trumps you might have a point but is your system really designed to never allow a Trump to become president? I don't think so.
"One day, we shall die. All the other days, we shall live."
I'm not familiar with the Dutch but since the UK's constitutional "monarchy" places so much power and authority in the hands of the head of government and basically none in the head of state, I don't see any real difference between you and a parliamentary republic. The idea that your government is the opposite of Germany, or Switzerland, or the US, or Taiwan is ridiculous.
Last night as I lay in bed, looking up at the stars, I thought, “Where the hell is my ceiling?"
We are all democracies regardless of whether the head of state is appointed, elected or inherited. In that sense we're not opposite because we are all democracies. The opposite of democracy in that sense is perhaps a dictatorship etc
However none of that is what makes up a republic. A republic is a nation that doesn't have a monarchy. It absolutely can be democratic (USA, Germany) . . . or it can be Communist (People's Republic of China, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea [North Korea]), USSR [Union of Soviet Socialist Republics], theocratic (Islamic Republic of Iran, Islamic Republic of Afghanistan), dictatorial (Arab Republic of Egypt). Of course you can argue that simply having the name republic in the name of the nation doesn't actually make you a republic, certainly there are no democratic republics that are truly democratic. But they're not monarchies and they do meet the definition of being a republic.
Republic says didly squat about what type of government you have. The only common denominator between those nations is they don't have a monarch (though North Korea comes close). So yes absolutely the opposite of republic is monarchy. It's a truism in fact.
Liberal republics like the USA and Germany are only one of many types of republic.
No. "Republic" does not mean "not a monarchy." A military junta is not a republic. A theocratic state led by the head of the church is not a republic. Those things you label as democracy are an integral part of the modern definition of republic. Even in older definitions, a core concept was that governance was a public concern, not the private domain of a leader or council. Nowhere has republic ever been defined as "anything that doesn't have a king." You need a king or queen to be a monarchy. Republic is something specific, not a general term for "not a monarchy" Republic is, in fact, almost entirely a matter of how your governance is structured. Hell, by your earlier analogy, a block of cheese is both a republic and atheist. No!
Last night as I lay in bed, looking up at the stars, I thought, “Where the hell is my ceiling?"
Sure it is exactly what it means. In fact it was literally in the definition I gave earlier. Most modern constitutional monarchies have no actual governance powers exercised by the monarchy, but they're not republics by definition. In fact in Australia in 1999 they had a referendum on whether to become a republic or not - the mode of being a republic chosen involved zero disruption to their governance, the very limited powers currently exercised by an appointed Governor General would be exercised by an appointed President instead. The only change was not to "how your governance is structured" it was from having a monarch to not having one.
Are you claiming China, USSR, Afghanistan, Iran, Egypt etc are not republics?
Are you claiming the Holy See and a block of cheese are republics?
And since you're working so heavily on ontology, do you mind telling me what was Holy or Roman about the Hapsburg's Austria-based empire? Also, do you mind telling me when the US will be getting tax money from the other states in the Americas like Brazil and Canada?
Last night as I lay in bed, looking up at the stars, I thought, “Where the hell is my ceiling?"