Results 11 to 12 of 12
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May 23rd, 2016 04:58 PM #11
the question would be: if you are skeptical of diluting power, shouldn't you be more skeptical of centralizing/concentrating it?
as in the case of the rest of the world, be it monarchy, dictatorship, theocracy, federal, central or confederate, none of those matter when you have a bunch of extremists in your turf and they would wreak havoc wherever they please.
but looking back at swiss confederate history, in people's minds there were fears of local warlords just running the place at the time of william tell after they got their independence. turns out they did pretty well and they have a LOOOONG history of keeping arms in their households(and for the most part avoided wars and conflicts). swiss don't even have a distinct culture as they are pretty much a melting pot of european descents and languages.
one can only dream of becoming one. but we're not alone in that regard. brits too want to be like the swiss.Damn, son! Where'd you find this?
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May 23rd, 2016 08:45 PM #12
as it stands, our country's government is top-down meaning power WAAAAY concentrated to the top.
time and time again, this has the tendency to produce excessive bureaucracy and ever expanding power over the ordinary citizen's life
on the other hand, countries that tend to prosper are among those who have the freest laws and where power isn't as much centralized, i.e. smaller communities have autonomy
How Switzerland's political system works
IJA137Damn, son! Where'd you find this?