Corolinth wrote:
Our society wouldn't collapse into anarchy. What's more likely to happen is that we'd see deliberation on new laws grind to a halt every election. That's not something I necessarily see as bad.
I think, "No," should be a valid vote in a presidential election, too. Furthermore, I think if the winning president is unable to garner the approve more than 50% of the total U.S. population (not the people who bothered to vote, not even the registered voters, but 50% of the actual population), then we should go the next four years with no president.
We have state governments. We don't need the federal government to "get things done."
Yes we do. The states would be unable to effectively defend themselves without the federal government to coordinate them. It wouldn't be just a bunch of state National Guards as they are now; they'd be a bunch of little banana-republic militaries, and possibly the larger ones would gobble the smaller ones up.
The existence of a national military of a nation of the size, population and wealth of ours (and no snark about the state of the economy or whatever; in terms of actual physical assets we have plenty and the country cannot be confiscated by creditor nations) is what enables us to so thouroghly protect ourselves from enemy attack. Without this national-level effort, there would be no massive Navy keeping us utterly safe from invation, no major nuclear deterrent preventing us from being blackmailed and dominated by the Russians or Chinese, and no advanced technology that makes all the various nations stick to low-level conflict for fear of having to confront the U.S. Army or Marine Corps.
The idea that everything would be hunky-dory with no national government is absurd. We'd live in a completely different world and not a pleasent one. In fact, there probably would be no Constitutional freedoms to worry about the government imfringing because someone else would have rolled in here and taken over long ago. In fact, that almost did happen in 1812, and that probably would have been the luckiest we would ahve ever gotten in terms of a foriegn takeover.
As for generals and admirals, they do not decide national strategy. They may advise on the military aspects of it, but there is more to war than the movements of ships and tanks. At that level its just as much politics as combat. Generals and Admirals are great for operational-level and tactical-level matters, but someone has to integrate the military aspects of war into an overall national plan. After all, the war is going to end at some point. Then of course, someone has to get theose generals and admirals on the same sheet of music, and generally you don't want that person being a general or admiral becuase they'll usually have some bias towards their own branch and its aspect of the fight, often to the detriment of the whole.
A perfect illustration is the Inchon landing in the Korean War. The North Koreans were very good alnd fighters but essentially they forgot that Korea's land is a peninsula. Sea control and understanding of how to apply it completely changed the land fight by allowing an amphibious envelopment maneuver that sent the DPRK packing, at least for a while.