The Myth Of American Democracy

1033 Words3 Pages

American Democracy is as an institution, relatively new. However, the concepts of Democracy and rule by popular sovereignty have existed stretching back thousands of years. Demos, a greek root, refers to the people, -ocracy having to do with governance. Constitutionalism is the belief that the government and sovereigns are held to a social contract with the people they govern, bound by the rule of law. Akin to our English predecessors, framers of the U.S. constitution desired to improve government and make a system accountable to the people. English government had previously been bound by a unique constitution already established hundreds of years prior precedented with the Magna Carta. Sovereigns, kings and queens in the english court were …show more content…

To maintain the right of voting for all and to allow for the people to decide who their representatives are is the very lifeblood of american political culture. Oftentimes the convoluted and, frankly, unfair systems-- note: systems-- through which citizens vote can blur the meaning and importance of casting a vote. This has created a plague of apathy in American citizens, especially due to misinformation from the media and lack of important information in regards of who and how people can cast a vote from the government. It would be important to ease the apathy amongst citizens and to reeducate the people on who can vote and why they can vote as well as why they should vote in order to keep up with the idea in American political culture that voting is a responsibility, if not a necessity, for an American citizen so that the ideals of democracy can be upheld. It is also important that the American system of electing a President be based more heavily on popular sovereignty in order to better fulfill one of the pillars of democracy, being consent of the governed. Voting is an integral part of selecting representatives to be the voices of the people in the federal government. Those representatives, especially the head of an entire branch of government as well as the face of the country, should be spoken for by the people and should speak for the …show more content…

The most basic and inalienable rights granted to the citizens of the United States are enumerated in the Bill of Rights, from the preamble to the Tenth Amendment. The American people generally feel what could be called an entitlement to these enumerated rights. These basic rights should guarantee freedoms to the American people as per the social contract that citizens and our government have entered into. These principles should be supported by citizens and leaders because they are the failsafe freedoms. They are the freedoms that justified a hundred supreme court cases. They are the freedoms in the very fabric of our political culture. They are the freedoms that cause consistent and long lasting contention without ever being abolished. These basic freedoms are the basis of the democratic political culture in America. The meaning has informally shifted over time and the absolute rights are infringed upon again and again because of prejudice and unjustifiable actions on the part of the government and private individuals. Again and again the rights are overlooked and trampled over in times of war or merely in times of perceived danger. Many citizens and United States residents are not afforded the rights they are entitled to. Citizens and leaders should support the universal maintenance of these rights in order to make America the land of the free and to fulfill the preconception of a fair country that abides by its own

Open Document