Boycott US
Overview:
The community dedicated to boycotting the US until they stop fascism, restore full democracy and start following international law.
Americans have a moral obligation to resist Donald Trump and project 2025 at every turn.
America is a flawed democracy currently being ruled by oligarchs. Stop the backslide! Dont let America become the next Hungary.
America needs to challenge the court rulings of citizens united v. fec and shelby county v. holder, protect the media, implement independent district drawing, and the single transferable vote so they don't end up having people stay home in life-changing elections because they cannot vote for their favourite candidate.
Join 50501.chat to fight back!
Related communities:
Boycott:
!buycanadian@lemmy.ca
Activism:
!antitrumpalliance@lemmy.world
view the rest of the comments
That’s pretty much only because the idealized form of democracy in the West is a representative one, i.e. the people vote in a representative when a certain period of time passes and hope they don’t cave in to foreign interests/bribes.
In a direct democracy, the people have a direct say in government policy and can make their interests known via regular votes and meetings. I’m not going to pretend like it’s a flawless form of democracy, but it’s definitely harder for bad actors to push their agenda if citizens can directly push back against that without any red tape getting in the way. Unfortunately even consideration of it is extremely rare in the world though.
Do you have an example that supports your view? How does a system with thousands of votes a year survive the effects of voter inattention better than one that has one big one every four years?
Something that came to my mind as a possible such example is open-source software. But I think that only maps in an analogous way, not literally.
For sure! Switzerland is definitely the biggest example, though there's also Liechtenstein and arguably Cuba (not saying it is outright). If I were to play devil's advocate I'd say that those are all semi direct democracies, though considering how abstracted they all are from representative democracies in general I'd also say that it hardly makes a difference from a relative standpoint.
In Switzerland's case, there's no need to register directly as a voter, and every citizen has an opportunity to vote on various issues on about a quarterly basis, or 4 times per year. People can also vote on appending the constitution and can vote against bills approved by authorities. According to the Politics of Switzerland Wikipedia page: