This is all true, but real democracy doesn't scale well, and is far from conflict free.
It depends which point of view you take. If you take the point of view of a rich landowner, then democracy sure doesn't scale well. If you are a regular person, it scales a bit better.
No. I wasn't being coy or relative. Democracy doesn't scale beyond 1000 voting members. I've seen in on many occasions. Attend a full church business meeting sometime, there is a reason that they don't do such things except under dire need.
The US isn't a democracy now, and never has been, because the framers knew that democracy was flawed, and didn't trust that it was sustainable in any context.
Quite true. They knew that they needed to establish a government that would protect the interests of rich landowners from regular people. They were very explicit about how they regarded non-property holders - as dangerous and stupid masses from which the rich needed to be protected. Madison and Hamilton both were shockingly open about it.
That was only two out of hundreds, and Madison was conflicted in this regard. Try actually reading the Federalist Papers and the full text of the US Constitution, it was certainly not intended to protect landowners. Hamilton was functionally a loyalist and an elitist, but his particular viewpoint was not widely held by '76ers or framers.
Many of the founding fathers greatly admired the British government. At the Constitutional Convention, Alexander Hamilton called the British government "the best in the world,"
Understandable considering their background. The US would still be a British territory if King George could have managed to compromise.
The same ideas are now working for the interests of large corporations, which essentially own governments. Incidentally, none of what I am writing here is particularly controversial, but I encourage anyone who is interested to investigate these matters on their own (i.e. don't take my word for anything).
I don't contest this assesment of the current situation, but it was not because of the framers or the government that they designed that this is so, but despite it. If we can blame the constitution for any of this, it would be because the public has put too much faith in a document that following generations of Americans have too long ignored.
Our history has proven them correct.
Yes. If there is great inequality, then a democracy will tend to eliminate the inequality. To maintain inequality, democracies must be avoided at all costs. This is not just US history. This is the history of western civilization.
I say democracy is a tyranny of a majority, and any inequality in life will be maintained or increased by one, not limited by one. I have the history of civilizations to support my position, you have the limited retoric of the past 200 years or less.
Keep in mind that prior to 1913, we didn't have central banking, franctional reserve banking, Senators were not elected, and there was no federal income tax. We still don't directly elect the US president. The US is a federated republic quite intentionally, and most of Europe are parlimentary republics for similar reasons.
And you are saying these are good things? I think you must be on the wrong forum.
I'm saying these are better than democracy. I'm certainly not on the wrong forum. Perhaps you don't fully understand what democracy leads too?
Anyone who advocates for increased democracy at the state or national level is advocating for majority rule, and the rights of a minority have no meaning in that context. Such a person is either a fool or a Sith Lord.
Your last sentence articulates well the contempt for democracy inculcated by western "liberal" education. This thinking leads to centralization of power and capital, which are exactly what frameworks like bitcoin are designed to dismantle.
Democracy is great in theory, but I care only about the practice. A democracy requires much work on the part of the electorate to maintain itself. Inevitablly the electorate becomes distracted by their own lives, and leaves such things to people who are more interested in the political process than themselves, which leads to the consolidation of power by fiat, corruption or simple neglect. It happens every time. A republic isn't better in this regard, but they are more sustainable because the process of representative governance slows down the processes that lead to rot. Thomas Jefferson, himself, expressed doubt that a generation could impose a social contract on those that followed, but also doubted that there was a better solution. The root problem with democracy is the human component.