fadedpsychosis wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:mrswdk wrote:American citizens basically have as much choice over the direction their country is going in as Chinese citizens do theirs.
False.
BigBallinStalin wrote:mrswdk wrote:Americans currently have a Congress that only 10-20% of the country actually approve of. And yet, instead of heeding this and changing track, Congress is actually engaging in even more of the behavior that its citizens despise so much.
Even when dissatisfied Americans get organized and, say, entire states formally vote in favor of legalizing Cannabis, central government actually promises to do everything it can to prevent the democratically identified will of the people being realised.
But hey, at least you get to vote for your president, right?
None of that confirms that "American citizens basically have as much choice over the direction their country is going in as Chinese citizens do theirs."
I'm not denying that the federal government is a grand road toward incompetence and waste, but the formal and informal rules of the US are different from China's. To support your claim, you'd have to compare how similar China and the US are--in terms of civil society/'the people' in influencing their government.
mrswdk may have a point though... the power of the ruler always comes from the consent of the ruled. the methods used to obtain and keep that power are wildly different, and the actions they do with that power are different too, but in both cases the 'average' citizen of each has no direct say over what the rulers make into policy... and as evidenced by recent events, those in power in the US are listening less and less to what their constituents actually want
The direction of a country is not only steered by the political but also by the market and civil society (i.e. the non-political and non-economic, e.g. charity, religion, quasi-education). Compared to China, the US is very economically free and more free in the civil society sense, thus people have a greater ability to steer their country.
This is why mrswdk's position doesn't make sense. If it's modified, then my response may differ. For example, if we limit power/influence only to the political, I'd still argue that the Americans have greater ability to yield influence than Chinese--in general.
Most Americans for most elections do not vote; they choose not to exert influence because it's not worth it--it's somewhat of a luxury to do so. I'm not sure what the voter participation rates for very local elections in China are, but from what I recall the Head Directors/Whatever and the Provincial Governors 'elect' themselves. In regard to voting, the Chinese generally have hardly any influence over the selection of politicians while the Americans have a significantly higher influence over the selection of politicians.
The US has a freer press, which allows greater range of opinion (and influence) from the intelligentsia to 'laypersons' and ultimately to politicians. A freer internet in the US allows easier mobilization for activism and for becoming more aware of public policies at a lower cost--the Chinese have a less free internet and face much higher costs for activism and for attempting to uncover the opaqueness of their government.
I can keep listing more examples, but it should be clear how many more avenues of influence the Americans have compared to the Chinese.
as a tangent: If the Chinese government become much more democratic, their politicians would then have a greater pie to confiscate, so it's win-win for them.