We have the option to vote for candidates from the level of local government, to the level of national government. We have PLENTY of control, we just choose not to use or enforce it. Again, the system is NOT set up to make it difficult for the average person to get involved, it's very open to general input.
This is just... no. I'm... I'm kinda' sorry, but no. It takes a hell of a lot more than just choice to use or enforce the control we potentially have. The system itself is necessarily near-impossible for the average person to get involved with, especially on actual policy making levels, simply due to the raw logistics behind getting elected or getting the bodies necessary to get yourself listened to together. Th'average fellow can get involved, but it's going to be at the whim and patronage of someone else. There is a bloody reason the majority of elected positions on
every freaking level of government in the states are largely held by people of a relatively advantageous economic position. Those without economic clout or backing (latter of which you damn sure better believe is going to come with riders) cannot, barring the rare exception, manage to manage a campaign. We can vote for candidates on all levels of government, but those people we're voting on are by and large going to be coming out of the same pool of people. It's
possible to do things differently (crowdfunding equivalents, etc.), but those with a raw resource advantage stays ahead of the game for a reason, and it's not just because of lack of will.
Conceptually, we do have a lot of control in the states. However, the logistics behind
organizing that control means that practically that control is next to impossible to leverage and effectively damningly small. Information technology development
may be lightening the logistics burden there, but it remains to be seen if it's actually going to bring it down to a level that we actually see the barrier to entry into politics and general governance made healthy.
... I'd agree that getting involved is one of the only ways to even attempt to change that, though. Identifying and building the networks necessary for expressing what control the populace does have starts with that.
Also caveat that it's like two AM and I'm half asleep. Some of that may be somewhat disjointed. But goddamn, sorry Bd, saying that "we just choose not to use or enforce [our control]" is so massively understating the issue it's almost painful.