webkilla wrote:this is why I love the danish multi-party system...
Hmm, I disagree. While a 2-party system is not exactly the
best way to run a country, having six or seven leads, in practice, to more bureaucracy and gridlock. Witness the current fiasco in the Netherlands: a minority party, with two or three seats, pulls out of a coalition and might just cause a whole new election with all the expense and tussle that occurs.
to that end, I think that american politics resemble bolshevik communism more than democracy...
Oh thanks. We really appreciate that.

I should point out that we are a union of states, where the power is SUPPOSED to rest in the hands of the state legislatures, and the federal government is supposed to deal with trade, treaties, and national protection. The people voice their views about candidates in the primary elections, which, in my view are far more important than the finals. The primary candidates must appeal to the wings, while the final candidates must appeal to the middle.
While it's possible for a single party to take the House, Senate, and Presidency all in one sweep, that doesn't mean as much if the other party still controls in the state legislatures. Like I said, power is supposed to be concentrated at the state level. Witness, for instance, the current fights over abortion, homosexual marriage, and gun control - these arguments are being settled in STATE, not national legislatures. On one hand, you have lefty states like California or Massachussetts, who are very liberal, and very conservative states like Kansas or Utah, or middling states like Ohio and Florida.
It does not take a majority to prevail ... but rather an irate, tireless minority, keen on setting brushfires of freedom in the minds of men. - attributed to Samuel Adams
“To preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of the people always possess arms and be taught alike, especially when young, how to use them.” - Richard Henry Lee