It's sad, yes. But there is a difference.
In your country, the government essentially owns all the land, all the property, and the people themselves. Of course, they make it look good by giving the people some freedom... so that the people won't revolt, and so that the government can make money off their slaves. It's called Civil Law. It takes a large group of people to change things in Civil Law law.
In the US, the only thing that holds the people back is their lack of knowledge about Common Law. The people actually use the Common Law in many jury trials all over the US. They use it to put down government overreach. The thing that is set in place in Common Law is the authority of any one man or woman over their own life in ways that the government can't deny them.
Now, as Americans are waking up to their authority more and more, they are starting to recognize how the government is unlawfully entrapping them because of their lack of knowledge, and they are starting to do something about it. The government' response is something like this... - https://banned.video/watch?id=658ca5d1d73929b3eef819f7.
All governments work that way. Even if they are branded as the populous democratic country, the government is not democratic, they own the people and all the land. We all just believe the piece of paper proving we own the property but the government can seize it if they like especially if you act like a rebel bitch. Look at Mar Lago's price.
Whoever shall sit, I think should have the welfare of the citizen to be put as the priority. Otherwise, the US will be divided and they are going to have a civil war.
Not the kind of stuff they would want as they'd be more vulnerable.
That's not true. Check out Common Law at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_law. Also, look at the map of the various kinds of governments around the world, here - https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/92/Map_of_the_Legal_systems_of_the_world_%28en%29.png.
Wikipedia is not quite accurate in its understanding of Common Law, simply because they are being edited in ways, to fool the people. In the US, the 12-person jury rules over the judges' decisions... when the jury is called into action by either the prosecutor or the defendant. This is common law... the rule of the common people.
The Common Law jury has the right to act and decide in any way that they want... ANY WAY, with regard to the case at hand. The Civil Law jury has to decide according to the rules of the judge.