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-.Dd January 1, 1970
-.Dt demus phil
-.Os Runxi Yu
-.Sh NAME
-.Nm demus
-.Nd Democracy: The United States (Unfinished)
-.Sh INTRODUCTION
-.Pp
-When people talk about democracies, it's common to think of the US
-Constitution as the "defining point of democracy". While the US is the
-first modern democracy, its is far from perfect. I will briefly go
-through the following.
-.Sh CORRUPTION
-.Pp
-A study shows that "Multivariate analysis indicates that economic
-elites and organized groups representing business interests have
-substantial independent impacts on U.S. government policy, while average
-citizens and mass-based interest groups have little or no independent
-influence."
-.Lk https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/62327F513959D0A304D4893B382B992B/S1537592714001595a.pdf/testing-theories-of-american-politics-elites-interest-groups-and-average-citizens.pdf (Source)
-.Pp
-A near-ideal democracy would have a roughly linear positive correlation
-between the fraction of voters who support a policy and the possibility
-of the policy being passed in the legislature. But in the US, the line
-is flat at about 30%. A representative democracy wouldn't have a
-perfect correlation, because the general public is unable to be informed
-on all topics; fluctuations are normal. But *a flat line* means that the
-opinions of the people don't matter at all. This does not make sense in
-any type of democracy.
-.Pp
-According to the study, the influence of economic elites and business
-interest groups on politics is rather high with a rough positive
-correlation as opposed to the flatline for the general public, making
-the US an oligarchy rather than a democracy. Mass-based interest groups
-have discernible impact on policies, but are still trivial compared with
-economic elites and businesses. About three billion dollars are spent
-yearly by large "politically active" businesses to bribe politicians
-to pass policies for their interest. While businesses should have a say
-in legislation, it is unacceptable that they have superior dominance
-over public opinion.
-.Sh THE SENATE
-.Pp
-The Senate of the USA consists of 100 members, with 2 from each state.
-Two senators from California represent 39 million people while the two
-from Wyoming represent 500 thousand people. The founding fathers never
-could have imagined such a huge a difference between the population of
-states.
-.Pp
-Some people believe that the Senate helps against populism as opposed to
-the House. Although the number of Senators for each state do indeed not
-correspond to the population, this has no correlation whatsoever with
-preventing populism and doesn't serve an obvious purpose. It only
-"helps" by giving completely unproportional voting powers to people
-based on their location, period.
-.Pp
-The Senate also suffers from the fillibuster. Passing a bill in the
-Senate has a few steps: Firstly the Senators must *agree to vote*,
-passed at a supermajority. Then the Senators actually vote on the bill.
-Those who are against the bill will just disagree to vote altogether,
-effectively requiring all bills to have a supermajority support to pass
-which is nearly impossible as the two dominant political parties almost
-always oppose each others' bills and neither have a supermajority in
-the Senate.
-.Sh The Electoral College
-.Pp
-The electoral college makes it possible to win an federal election
-without winning the national popular vote. It also, similarly but not as
-badly as the Senate, represent the people of each state
-disproportionally as each state has two extra electoral votes regardless
-of their population.
-.Pp
-A subtle but serious problem with the electoral college is that
-electors' listening to the votes of the people is only a *tradition*.
-Legally, electors can vote however they want, meaning that the US is not
-theoretically a democracy. This hasn't happened before, but this is one
-more to the list of problems in the constitution, and is a potential for
-disaster.
-.Sh Plurality Voting
-.Pp
-Single-winner elections in the US uses what's called "plurality
-voting", where each voter casts one vote to their favorite candidate
-and the candidate with the most votes win. This contributes to the
-partisan dualopoly (not an actual word, but it basically means
-"monopoly" but with two rather than one) as voters who support smaller
-parties will undergo the decision of choosing their honest favorite or
-one of the two big parties that most closely ressembles their favorite.
-As it's hard to gather votes for smaller parties, and thus there's a
-small chance of them actually winning the electron, many voters
-strategically vote for the big party in order to not be "taken over"
-by the big party that they oppose more.