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- I was reading about Myanmar eternal struggle with militarys in power. We also have Iran, Uganda, Sudan, Venezuela, Cuba and several nations around the world, were people cant choose their leaders.
As the tests below points out:
So if democracy is in theory a universal guarantee, but bilions of people around the globe dont have acess to that, theres no guarantee that we will always have a democratic elected governant.
Working democracy needs citizen involvement and open compromise.
Democracy requires participation and responsibility within our system of governance. It is our responsibility to make our voices heard and that we question the policies and decisions of the Government and keep the Government accountable. Listening to different perspectives and views makes democracy stronger.
One thing i noted, is that several americans dont vote, by their own choyce, so they abdic, or let other people choose for them, sans, letting key principles of democracy in the hands of others.
Public participation: People have a right and a duty to participate in government and in civil society. Public participation includes standing for elections, voting in elections, becoming informed, holding and attending community meetings, joining civil and/or political organisations, paying taxes, protesting and petitioning.
Equality: All people should be treated equally and without discrimination and be given equal opportunities.
Tolerance: While the party representing the majority of people runs government, in a democracy the rights of opposition or minority groups are also protected. Government serves all the people equally. Everyone should be allowed to express their opinions and join the political, religious or civil groups of their choice.
Accountability: Government must be accountable to the people for its actions, including the laws that are passed and how these laws are implemented. Our taxes are used for government spending and all budgets and financial statements should be presented to parliament and be available to the public.
Transparency: Government must be open to the public about its actions. It must allow the public to give input before new laws are passed.
Regular, free and fair elections: Elections must happen in a free and fair way, without intimidation, corruption or threats to the public before or during the election. Elections should also be held regularly. For South Africa, these occur every five years.
Accepting the results of elections: When a political party loses an election, the party and its supporters must accept this result.
Economic freedom: People in a democracy should be allowed to have some kind of private ownership of property and business, they should be allowed to choose their own type of work and join labour unions.
Controlling and preventing the abuse of power: There should be ways to prevent government officials from abusing their powers. The courts should be independent and they should have the power to:
Rule of law: The rule of law means laws rule above all else and that no one is above the law, including the parliament or president of the country. Everyone must obey the law and be held accountable if they break the law. The law must also be equally, fairly and consistently enforced. Laws are the rules made on our behalf by parliament. The judiciary act as referees and enforce the rule of law. They may judge any action by government, citizens, organisations or companies and will use the Constitution and laws to decide whether the action was legal or illegal.
https://www.journalofdemocracy.org/articles/democracy-as-a-universal-value/
https://apnews.com/article/myanmar-elections-48f9f80748a23ce4ac9d7a1ea476f1f4
- I posted some hotgirls from Iran, Brazil, Afghanistan as a thank you for reading that wall of test.
Also, for those questioning if Super-Man would beat goku, it's pretty obviously. Goku doesnt has toughness, he always needs power upgrades to beat his bootleg adversaries, while Super-Man can tank a beatdown, so even if Goku is stronger, Super-Man could withstand the punishment and win the fight.
As the tests below points out:
We take democracy for granted. Very few of us living in democracies are old enough to have fought for it. We are the inheritors of our grandparents’ victories and we often don’t realise how hard they worked to build the democracies we enjoy. We were born into them, and as with any inheritance that we didn’t work for, we risk taking it for granted and frittering it away.
I’ve written before that the simplest measure of success for a form of government is life expectancy. At the very basic level, we ask of those who rule us that their rule affords us health and longevity. This has, in many ways, been the basic measure of social systems since early humans first formed societies; those that worked out how to live longer thrived, those that didn’t declined and vanished.
Democracies are good for health and longevity. By contrast, dictatorships and autocracies tend to have lower life expectancies, worse health, and less prosperity. In Russia, life expectancy is 71, in Germany it is 81.
There is a simple reason for this. In a democracy, where people can vote out their leaders, a form of political natural selection takes place. Those leaders who fail are removed from the political system, and those who succeed are given greater power. In fully enfranchised societies, politicians have to address the needs of those most vulnerable in order to get elected, and this leads to better public health outcomes.
So if democracy is in theory a universal guarantee, but bilions of people around the globe dont have acess to that, theres no guarantee that we will always have a democratic elected governant.
The idea of democracy originated, of course, in ancient Greece, more than two millennia ago. Piecemeal efforts at democratization were attempted elsewhere as well, including in India.<a href="https://www.journalofdemocracy.org/articles/democracy-as-a-universal-value/#f1" name="f1-text">1</a> But it is really in ancient Greece that the idea of democracy took shape and was seriously put into practice (albeit on a limited scale), before it collapsed and was replaced by more authoritarian and asymmetric forms of government. There were no other kinds anywhere else.
Thereafter, democracy as we know it took a long time to emerge. Its gradual–and ultimately triumphant–emergence as a working system of governance was bolstered by many developments, from the signing of the Magna Carta in 1215, to the French and the American Revolutions in the eighteenth century, to the widening of the franchise in Europe and North America in the nineteenth century. It was in the twentieth century, however, that the idea of democracy became established as the “normal” form of government to which any nation is entitled–whether in Europe, America, Asia, or Africa.
The idea of democracy as a universal commitment is quite new, and it is quintessentially a product of the twentieth century. The rebels who forced restraint on the king of England through the Magna Carta saw the need as an entirely local one. In contrast, the American fighters for independence and the revolutionaries in France contributed greatly to an understanding of the need for democracy as a general system. Yet the focus of their practical demands remained quite local–confined, in effect, to the two sides of the North Atlantic, and founded on the special economic, social, and political history of the region.
- If you watched Super-Man, the animated series, Theres a episode weres Super beats Darkseid, he thems tell to people of Apokolips that they're free to chose their new leader, schokling to Super, they choose Darkseid again. So we can assumr, after seeing the natural development of the politics in two of the biggest countries, was that people choose to let aside the option of choyce, to pick two candidates that talked what they liked to hear, and actec the way they wanted to act. Of course, Bolsonaro, a well know coward by brazilian military, tryied to escape the punishment of trying a coup. Well, China, one of the biggst countries in the globe(yeah, i said globe), theres protesters killed and or jailed left and right. From important pop figures, jornalists to the everyday person.Throughout the nineteenth century, theorists of democracy found it quite natural to discuss whether one country or another was “fit for democracy.” This thinking changed only in the twentieth century, with the recognition that the question itself was wrong: A country does not have to be deemed fit for democracy; rather, it has to become fit through democracy. This is indeed a momentous change, extending the potential reach of democracy to cover billions of people, with their varying histories and cultures and disparate levels of affluence.
It was also in this century that people finally accepted that “franchise for all adults” must mean all–not just men but also women. When in January of this year I had the opportunity to meet Ruth Dreyfuss, the president of Switzerland and a woman of remarkable distinction, it gave me occasion to recollect that only a quarter century ago Swiss women could not even vote. We have at last reached the point of recognizing that the coverage of universality, like the quality of mercy, is not strained.
Working democracy needs citizen involvement and open compromise.
Democracy requires participation and responsibility within our system of governance. It is our responsibility to make our voices heard and that we question the policies and decisions of the Government and keep the Government accountable. Listening to different perspectives and views makes democracy stronger.
One thing i noted, is that several americans dont vote, by their own choyce, so they abdic, or let other people choose for them, sans, letting key principles of democracy in the hands of others.
KEY PRINCIPLES OF DEMOCRACY:
- Key principles of democracy include free and fair elections, rule of law, protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms (like speech, assembly, and religion), citizen participation, government accountability and transparency, equality before the law, and respect for majority rule with minority rights, all supported by an independent judiciary and a free press to ensure power rests with the people.
The Principles of Democracy
Democratic principles are ideas that most people believe are essential for a democracy to thrive. The most important principles of democracy are:Public participation: People have a right and a duty to participate in government and in civil society. Public participation includes standing for elections, voting in elections, becoming informed, holding and attending community meetings, joining civil and/or political organisations, paying taxes, protesting and petitioning.
Equality: All people should be treated equally and without discrimination and be given equal opportunities.
Tolerance: While the party representing the majority of people runs government, in a democracy the rights of opposition or minority groups are also protected. Government serves all the people equally. Everyone should be allowed to express their opinions and join the political, religious or civil groups of their choice.
Accountability: Government must be accountable to the people for its actions, including the laws that are passed and how these laws are implemented. Our taxes are used for government spending and all budgets and financial statements should be presented to parliament and be available to the public.
Transparency: Government must be open to the public about its actions. It must allow the public to give input before new laws are passed.
Regular, free and fair elections: Elections must happen in a free and fair way, without intimidation, corruption or threats to the public before or during the election. Elections should also be held regularly. For South Africa, these occur every five years.
Accepting the results of elections: When a political party loses an election, the party and its supporters must accept this result.
Economic freedom: People in a democracy should be allowed to have some kind of private ownership of property and business, they should be allowed to choose their own type of work and join labour unions.
Controlling and preventing the abuse of power: There should be ways to prevent government officials from abusing their powers. The courts should be independent and they should have the power to:
- Act against government officials or bodies that commit an illegal or corrupt act.
- Allow for public participation and elections
- Check police abuse of power
- Intervene where corruption is exposed
- The Bill of Rights is a cornerstone of democracy in South Africa. It enshrines the rights of all people in our country and affirms the democratic values of human dignity, equality and freedom.
- The state must respect, protect, promote and fulfil the rights in the Bill of Rights
- The rights in the Bill of Rights are subject to the limitations contained or referred to in section 36, or elsewhere in the Bill
Rule of law: The rule of law means laws rule above all else and that no one is above the law, including the parliament or president of the country. Everyone must obey the law and be held accountable if they break the law. The law must also be equally, fairly and consistently enforced. Laws are the rules made on our behalf by parliament. The judiciary act as referees and enforce the rule of law. They may judge any action by government, citizens, organisations or companies and will use the Constitution and laws to decide whether the action was legal or illegal.
https://www.journalofdemocracy.org/articles/democracy-as-a-universal-value/
https://apnews.com/article/myanmar-elections-48f9f80748a23ce4ac9d7a1ea476f1f4
- I posted some hotgirls from Iran, Brazil, Afghanistan as a thank you for reading that wall of test.
Also, for those questioning if Super-Man would beat goku, it's pretty obviously. Goku doesnt has toughness, he always needs power upgrades to beat his bootleg adversaries, while Super-Man can tank a beatdown, so even if Goku is stronger, Super-Man could withstand the punishment and win the fight.
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