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Mike Moschos's avatar

In the case of the USA, this has only held true in recent decades. The United States once had genuinely democratic governance structures, however imperfect and limited, fundamentally based around decentralized and publicly accessible mass-member parties. The Democratic Party, as a small "d" democratic institution, and the Republican Party, as a small "r" republican institution, were honest in their naming and functioned within a semi-politically, semi-economically, and semi-scientifically decentralized system. These parties, while far from flawless, allowed for real representation, meaningful participation, and a level of public accountability in both economic and political decision-making.

However, due to the dirty deeds of an assortment of powerful special interest groups, our parties have transformed into centralized, exclusionary membership organizations. The so called Democratic Party has become a technocracy party, and the so called Republican Party became a conservative party. Neither really represents their original principles of democracy or republicanism, and they dont offer meaningful access or representation to the public. This shift has been accompanied by a broader centralization of political, economic, and scientific decision making, which has caused the effective loss of most democratic governance structures.

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Finn Andreen's avatar

Yes, agreed with you. Nevertheless, it is worth remember that the seeds of the oligarchic and corrupt system that exists today were planted during the founding itself and then later during the Civil War, as I tried to show in this article:

https://mises.org/mises-wire/how-us-became-so-dysfunctional-oligarchic-and-corrupt

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