Machine guns vs sharpened fruit.
It used to be easy to make an Empire and keep it.
It used to be easy to make an Empire and keep it.
You involuntarily showed your true colours, that England is supposed to dominate the UK.Neither Scotland nor Wales will be permitted to actually leave the UK, which is to say, England.
Neither Scotland nor Wales will be permitted to actually leave the UK, which is to say, England. Obviously some degree of autonomy is permissible. But any effort to extend it to true independence will in fact be met with force.
Ireland is one country. The majority of Irish people in the whole island wanted the English out but they still didn't leave. The only silliness is the smug assumption that the English had the right to partition the country. You can't even pretend that Ulster was in fact a local region that should have been treated separately. The Orange enclave only included part of Ulster, no doubt because the including the whole thing would have left the Protestants in the minority from the beginning!
If slavery kept the southern states from being democracies, then the US wasn't democratic till after the Civil War, and stopped being democratic after the Compromise of 1876, at least until the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Like it or not, democracy is totally compatible with racial and religious persecution, up to the point of genocide. This has decidedly negative implications about people who highest ideas of morality stop at democracy but there you are. The Confederacy was profoundly antidemocratic of course, but not because of slavery. The southern refusal to abide by the results of the free and fair democratic election of Lincoln was the great offense to democracy. And the South would have been guilty even if they had managed to maneuver Lincoln into shooting first.
Neither Scotland nor Wales will be permitted to actually leave the UK, which is to say, England. Obviously some degree of autonomy is permissible. But any effort to extend it to true independence will in fact be met with force.
Voting Rights Act of 1965, actually.If slavery kept the southern states from being democracies, then the US wasn't democratic till after the Civil War, and stopped being democratic after the Compromise of 1876, at least until the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Insofar as we can describe any election in the United States before the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment and the Voting Rights Act as "democratic," I'd certainly agree that their refusal to abide by the results of a free and fair election was a great offense. But their refusal to do is is tied up intimately with their enslavement of a third of their population, so I see no need to try to "rank" which is the greater offense against democracy.The southern refusal to abide by the results of the free and fair democratic election of Lincoln was the great offense to democracy.
You involuntarily showed your true colours, that England is supposed to dominate the UK.Neither Scotland nor Wales will be permitted to actually leave the UK, which is to say, England.
In the sense that everyone gets a vote and their votes count equally, neither the US nor the UK is a democracy. The US constitution specifically provides that the minority can overrule the majority, insitutionalizing inequality in the Senate
When did the Native Americans get the vote in America?
The southern rich must have been super pissed to think that they would lose control of voting blocks worth untold thousands of votes large once their slaves were freed.
That's totally castrating.
You're one guy who owns 10 thousand slaves, which means you can cast 6001 votes on election day one year and the following year you can only cast one vote.
No, a percentage of the population is seeking independence. That's always beens the case. They're simply making more noise and in a better place to achieve it now.@ Guy Gardner - historically the Welsh have been the upstarts clamouring for independence, though that wore off in the 20th Century. Scotland were mostly content (we paid them off) but are now seeking political and diplomatic independence.
Yeah, these nasty Catholics vs. these holy Protestants. Gotta love such balanced, totally unbiased, objective views.![]()
However, although I do not know why the majority of the Irish in the Republic favor the maintenance of the Orange statelet, I make no apologies for suspecting that some do so because a Protestant population doesn't fit their vision of Ireland (which is to say, RC.) And I firmly insist that such sectarianism is morally wrong, and antidemocratic.
Yes.Everyone who votes for President has one vote, just like everyone who votes for a Senator has one vote. If the one is democratic, then so is the other.
No. "Democracy" does not mean "the majority's opinion always prevails in all possible policy formulation mechanisms." It means that everyone gets an equal say in determining who will assume legislative, executive, and/or judicial leadership positions.Any arrangement that allows the minority to dictate policy is undemocratic.
But that's not what democracy means. Democracy doesn't mean majority rule, it means that the government must obtain a mandate from its populace via an egalitarian voting system.If you agree that majority rule is justified on the grounds of equality,
No one in Northern Ireland pretends it is part of England. England is a distinct constituent country of the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland is not considered a part of it.If a local majority hopes to maintain its social privileges, then by this noxious conception, it can declare itself to be another state. Or, in the case at hand, pretend it is part of England.
No. It presupposes that there was no Irish state and that the Irish people's loyalties were not unified, and that, thus, a large, geographically contiguous minority within the island of Ireland whose loyalties substantially differ from those of the majority of the people of the island of Ireland, lacking an Irish state to which they must historically owe loyalty, should have the opportunity to decide, democratically, their final status.Calling Northern Ireland "their territory" presupposes that there is no whole country of Ireland where the majority should rule.
Actually, you might have noticed that I tend to regard it in terms of Unionists vs. Republicans, not Protestants vs. Catholics.It also presupposes that a religious denomination is sufficient to define a country.
Democracy doesn't mean majority rule, it means that the government must obtain a mandate from its populace via an egalitarian voting system.
Since the Stormont has come and gone at the whim of London, that certainly is [not] believed to be true by anyone, no matter what they say. The majority of the people of the whole of Ireland do not want the English. They apparently do not want a war to liberate the rest of their island, either, but fear of violence is not an expression of the democratic will. [A]nd insofar as Roman Catholic prejudice against Protestants is involved it is the very opposite of democracy. Which explains why some of the fake lefts are so favorable I suppose.
On the other hand, Sci's pretended concern about prejudice is merely disgusting.
The Orange statelet was set up so that the Protestants could continue an oppressive regime, that included systemic discrimination against Roman Catholics and sectarian privileges for Protestants. That's what Unionism is about, while Republicanism has always had its secular and revolutionary elements.
If he were to be consistent, he would have admitted that the South was justified in secession as well.
As for supporting the US attack on Serbia, I am not surprised, just disgusted.
There will be no returns of "Serbian" territory to Serbia, nor for that matter will the so-called Kosovars unite with Albania.
Democratic will has nothing to do with it. This concept of democracy is purely ideological, allowing any regime to be dubbed "democratic," regardless of its true nature, at the will of the authorities. Northern Ireland is the example here, but other have been South Africa and Israel.
The insistence that majority rule means every single policy decision has to be voted upon by a perfect legislature
The constitutional inequalities mandated in the Senate allowed the so-called Dixiecrat bloc to stop civil rights for years.
It was only the last liberal president, prodded by civil disorder and the perceived needs of the struggle against Communism that brought Lyndon Johnson to make these reforms. And now that the Communists are gone, sure enough, every one of these reforms, and those of Franklin Roosevelt too, are being eroded.
Or to put it another way, the US is a democracy in the egalitarian voting system sense. Therefore it is completely democratic for the 1% to have policy outcomes consistently favoring them over the 99%.
There is nothing to interpret if you write stuff like this. Your following posts have been far less biased.Typographical corrections added in brackets. As seen above, the first thing mentioned about support in the Irish Republic for the Orange statelet is reluctance to engage in war. The word "insofar" is a qualifier. I don't know if Horation83 neglected context and merely focused on the phrase "Roman Catholic prejudice against Protestants" but context matters. He is misinterpreting.
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