Rynar wrote:
I disagree. It is widely historically accepted that Abraham Lincoln was a dictator.
Appeal to popularity. Aside from the fact that it is not widely accepted, Abraham Lincoln was not a dictator.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/dictatorNeither Abraham Lincoln nor any President since has had anything like dictatorial power. The expansion of government has nothing to do with
form of government. Saying our government is a dictatorship because it has expanded in size is like saying that a Great White Shark is a form of whale because it is larger than most other fish and some dolphins.
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Acknowledging that fact, and the fact that their is no way to close the door behind you in the use of government power, every President since Lincoln has been a dictator. The fact that each administration, congress, and court since the Lincoln administration has built on the powers he assumed favors me in the discussion. We can use other terms to modify it, such as benevolant, communist, constitutional, ect., but the lable is aptly applied. There is no other term to descibe it, and infer the same meaning.
It is not a fact, and your assertion that "there is no way to close the door behind you in the use of government power" is simply bare assertion. Government power is not what makes a dictatorship. You don't need another term to infer the same meaning becuase there is no good reason that meaning should be inferred at all other than your own distaste for the situation.
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Our government is the laws and structure we live under, not the men and women who make it up. Most changes to the laws and structure have been to grow the scope and size of the beast since the 1850's, which is the time in which we established a Presidential Dictatorship.
The fact that government has grown in size and scope does not make it a dictatorship. Moreover, our government is both the structure
and the people.
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I am not implying anything, negative or positive. I am simply stating fact. They have no representation in their ruling government, limiting any say they have.
You have repeatedly used predjudicial language to do exactly that, especially since this is not accurate. They do have delegates to express their opinions, and those delegates are permitted to vote in comitee votes, just not the full House. They also have Electoral votes for PResident, and in any case, there is nothing stopping them from becoming states if they want to.
In fact, places such as Guam and Puerto Rico have held referendums regarding statehood and really could hold more any time they choose. It's absurd to claim that we "hold territories where people have no say in the laws that govern them" as a criteria for "hegemonic empire" or "warfare state" when not only do they in fact have some form of say, but have chosen that status themselves in the first place.
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It matters because we are discussing two things, the second hinging on the first.
1) Those several points matter because they define what a hegemonic empire is, qualifying us as one.
2) As we are qualified as an empire, it also qualifies us as a warfare state, as the two are nearly synonymous.
1) You have not established that anything makes us a hegemonic empire. The anser to "how do these things makes us an empire?" is not "these things define a hegemonic empire". That's simply begging the question.
2) It is not synonymous with a "warfare state" which is a made-up term in the first palce, and even if it weren't, would be applicable to a place like North Korea where the Army is the acknowledged, central facet of society, or to some society which requires outside conflict in order to maintain domestic stability.
Ours does not. The things that have caused us to enter variosu conflicts since World War I have been events driven elsewhere in the world, not because of any social issue here which is somehow staved off by fighting wars.. especially since the wars we have fought really have not required any alteration of the daily life of the average citizen.