Daryl wrote:With 307 pages to date, everything that could be postulated and discussed has been.
My difficulty is that I live in a country that has much in common with the US. An English speaking democracy, proud military traditions, individually wealthy compared to nearly all others, free press, mostly populated by those who have migrated here and their descendents, a history with rugged pioneers in remote areas, and much similar.
There are differences that puzzle me and others in the free world. The US's abhorrence of anything that has a tint of socialism, lack of universal health and welfare nets, high level of religious belief, and others. However your gun laws, and the belief of some of your population that violently overthrowing a democratically elected government is an ethical thing to consider and possibly do, are the most strange differences.
We call it sedition, treason and insurrection, and regard the concept as an abomination.
The first things you mentioned has to do with a combination of things, dating back to the red scares after both great wars and the relentless drives by big business to keep the fear generated by that alive. So any program that can be labeled socialism usually dies a quick death. Bear in mind also that Democrats have only controlled the House of Representatives for 8 years of the last 30.
As for the second point, bear in mind that we were born out of an insurrection. Our national myth enshrines King George III as boogyman. And there can be no question but what the founders has a profound distaste for tyranny. Alexander Hamilton penned that the state militias could be a bulwark against a tyrannical big government. This also is enshrined in the myth.
The founders didn't intend the constitution as a suicide pact, however. Washington himself led an army to put down the Whiskey Rebellion --- the only president in history to lead troops in battle during his term of office.
Don
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