[Home]History of Republicanism/Talk

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Revision 4 . . (edit) September 27, 2001 4:32 pm by Larry Sanger [Removing talk that is no longer relevant! :-)]
Revision 2 . . (edit) September 25, 2001 3:48 pm by Simon J Kissane
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff)

Changed: 1,5c1
I removed the following section because the distinction it makes between a democracy and a republic is not one generally recognized in politicial science, even though it may be popular in certain politicial circles in the US -- Simon J Kissane


Republicanism in the United States



The United States of America, often called a democracy, is actually a republic. The authors of the US Constitution intentionally chose a republic for several reasons. For one, it is impractical to collect votes from every citizen on every political issue. In theory, representatives would be more well-informed and less emotional than the general populace. Furthermore, a republic can be contrived to protect against the "tyranny of the majority." The Federalist Papers outline the idea that pure democracy is actually quite dangerous, because it allows a majority to infringe upon the rights of a minority. By forming a Republic in which representatives are chosen in many different ways (the President, House, Senate, and state officials are all elected differently), it is more difficult for a majority to control enough of the government to infringe upon a minority.


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