Khross wrote:
There are no consequences for misgoverning this nation. Until such a time as there are, the government will continue to travel along the trajectory it is on. And, yes, it is the government v. the population; unfortunately, the majority of the population blindly trusts the government.
Except that it isn't the government versus the population. The government is the way it is because its a product of the population; the government is an amalgamation of wildly different viewpoints, much as the population is. As for "no consequences for misgoverning this nation" those have to come from people, and dishing out consequences has costs to the disher. Documents and principles have no power themselves; people have to act on them and it is outrageous to expect people to endure major upheaval just to stop "misgovernance" in a nation where they can fundamentally go where they want, do what they please, and make a lot of money in the process.
The poor of this nation are rich compared to the vast bulk of human history. People are not going to struggle for "freedom" from "tyranny" when it isn't going to materially improve their lives. No one wants to live in a chaotic shithole.
Even if they did, you would just end up with a new government and a new form of "misgovernance". You go and toss out all the people that you think are doing things wrong and implement some new system where everyone's rights should theoretically be perfectly respected and the government theoretically can't do any mischief and..
Guess what? People are going to need food and water. They need electricity. They need medical care and clothing. They are not going to take "earn it yourself" as an answer, especially if the means of those things being produced disappeared due to the fighting, because going and "tossing out the politicians" isn't all neat and clean in practice. Someone is going to have to answer legal questions about who owns what, who can do what to whom, and a host of other things, and if people think the legal system is unfair, quoting the founding fathers at them is not going to help much.
And guess what? Now that you tossed one government out, its a lot easier to toss another.
You can dislike the fact that people behave that way all you want, but people are people, and unless you can invent different ones, that's what you got. We live in a country where when it comes right down to it, people have what they need, and can, with either luck or industry, live in fabulous wealth and technological advancement. They can feel so safe from outside attack, defended by the mightiest weapons ever produced that they can tell themselves the threats don't even exist.
And they can do as they please on a day to day basis with a very very low risk of being arbitrarily yanked off the street for an imaginary crime, and even if they are, there is public and press outrage that goes unchecked by the government.Or, to put it even more cynically, there's no **** money in revolution. There's no steak dinners or fancy new iPhones, and no matter how many people want to bemoan materialistic impulses, it is **** asinine to expect people to accept austerity for no better reason than to satisfy an ideological stance. It won't happen, and it won't happen because there's no point in an ideology that doesn't make life materially better.