This is not splitting hairs.
The Greek city-states were democracies where individuals would meet and vote on matters of state.
That happens only in select small towns in the USA.
In the US we elect most representatives by majority vote thus we avoid the cumbersome and unstable coalition governments commony to parliamentary systems.
The House of Representatives is an example of representative democracy where most Congressional districts are roughly apportioned according to population within a state. HOWEVER the aspect of a Constitutional republic is demonstrated where regardless of population each state is guaranteed at least one representative.
The Senate is then an aspect of a Constitutional republic because each state has two Senators regardless of population size. The states are all equal in the Senate and the Senate itself is therefore not democratic at all.
The President is not directly elected by popular vote and that would be democracy. The President is elected based on the Electoral votes he receives with the Electoral votes being a function of the number of Senators and Representatives each state has. The purpose being to level out the power of the larger states to insure the representation of the smaller states.
These things do not occur in democracies.
That you do not understand or recognize the distinction is a you-problem and not a me-problem. Ditto that for @rockfox
@MeganC, you are very good in how system is supposed to work. Horewer, @rockfox is far better in how syatem actually is working.You might want to brush up on your U.S. history with respect to our own adherence to treaties. There is a reason the Russians say the US is 'non agreement capable'.
Have you even read the Constitution lately? It is dead letter. Beyond the broad outlines of the form of government the details with respect to limits of power are entirely ignored. And even that ignores the way the uniparty and domestic intelligence have completely done an end run around the vaunted separation of powers.
Here is good article about forgotten aspect of states:
Machiavelli and the Globalists: Why the Elites Despise Independent Thought ⋆ Brownstone Institute
Where this will lead us is a genuinely open question; we find ourselves, like Machiavelli, at the beginning of something...
brownstone.org
So it neccesity to involve yourself into every issue, create new issues and never completely solve existing issues. And only way to do this is by forming various agencies, bureaus etc... Can any parliament/supreme court control them? No, thanks to number of agencies and technical knowledge needed for each agency.
Special knowledge needed for agencies means that they get to create their own rules, enforce them and run their own court. And how regular judge can understand deeply technical question when explain judge terminology and what is happening takes half of trial? Therefore agencies are in practice independent who created their own law. Just consider CDC's moratorium on rent payment during Corona stuff. They made rule with power of law on thing outside their own competence.
So in practice 99% of laws gets created by unelected uncontrollable bureaucracy, while 1% gets created by Congress. No wonder people speak of deep state.
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