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Edited on Tue Dec-15-09 05:37 AM by divideetimpera
OK, it is SO GOOD to see that you guys on DU are finally starting to catch on to what real politics is all about. Real politics is mainly about the structure of your govt. Everything else is practically just window dressing.
The reason that america does not have the social welfare state (e.g., national healthcare etc) that the other western nations have is that we do not have a parliamentarian form of govt, and they do.
We have a strong checks and balances federalist republic with a showstopper senate and judiciary.
The founding fathers and in particular james madison wrote about why they wanted this particular form of govt. They wrote about this in the federalist papers, madison's notes from the constitutional convention and in a letter to jefferson from madison.
Here is a basic summary of what they said: They did not want democracy. In fact the primary reason the founding fathers installed our present constitution was that under the articles of confederation, the people were beginning to assert their will because under the articles of confederation, some of the several states were developing parliamentarian demcracies. That meant that the majority of working class citizens in those states were raising taxes on the rich and were allowing debt relief for people who were broke. The founding fathers, being rich, did not like that. So Madison created a type of govt that would give the appearance of democracy, but that in practice would prevent the will of the people from being exerted via the vote.
You at DU have begun to see this in the healthcare debate. The senate is thwarting the will of the people--JUST AS IT WAS DESIGNED TO DO BY ITS INVENTOR, JAMES MADISON!
Let me tell you what madison said was the primary purpose of his new constitution: to preserve wealth inequality, to "protect the minority of the opulent against the majority," in his words. In fact, in that same paragraph he wrote that the Senate was the primary way that his constitution would achieve that goal.
Madison's new gov't would fragment the will of the people by increasing faction by increasing the size of the voting districts that elected politicians. He noted that politicians from small voting districts had to more or less follow the will of the people because in small districts the people were more able to "unite and discover their common interest" and thus force the politicians to do as the people wanted.
In larger districts that would be created under his new constitution (e.g., the office of the president and the senate), the districts were so large that there naturally existed more FACTIONS in these larger districts. More factions meant that the people were more diviided and could not thus unite and discover their common intererst and thereby make the politicians obey the will of the people.
Large districts like the entire nation (the president) and each state (the senate) were so fragmented by the factions in them that the voters would be divided and not united.
Divide et impera, wrote madison to jefferson, was how the USA should be ruled. Divide and conquer by fragment the people by increasing the number of factions in voting districts.
Madison and founding fathers created factions in voting districts by enlarging them.
In the quasi-parliamentarian governments that were growing under the articles of confederation before 1791 when the new constitution was installed, the politicians were elected from small disticts. Small meaning fewer factions and therefore more unity among voters.
THat is the secret of all the other western nations. THey are small and have parliamentarian govts. The real power in every other western nation (excepting france, to some degree) rests in the lower house, where the politicians are all elected from small districts. The upper house (if there even is one) is powerless to stop the will of the lower house. And the prime minister actually serves at the behest and is controlled and elected by the lower house. All the real power is vested in those politicians elected from small (and relatively faction-free) voting districts. That is democracy, which is something we in america do not really have. Not since the founding fathers succeeded in their counterrevolution which culminated in their replacing the articles of confederation with the present federalist constitution.
If you want real national healthcare, you have to have more democracy. In order to get more democracy, you have to have more unity among voters. In order to get more unity, you have to have fewer factions. In order to get fewer factions, you have to have smaller voting districts. In order to get smaller voting districts, you have to get rid of the office of the president and you have to get rid of the senate. And you have to make the lower house districts smaller. How do you do that?
De-federalize.
In other words, send power back to the states. There is really only one way to do it--starve the federal govt and get rid of the IRS. Send all taxing power back to the states. One plank of the rightwing is to do just that. Of course it is all talk. The GOP elected politicians would never do it. Red meat for their base, but they would never do it. Because that would increase democracy, and well, the people would then do things like, ah, implement single payer healthcare, which is something the people want, but the politicians (and their big donors) do not want.
Very encouraging to see this thread here, though. Though I would never see it. So, it's a good day for me.
Carry the message far and wide!
For more on this, see Dr Woody Holton's books and essays (google his name and the phrase "excess of democracy").
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