Yes, because the King of [insert country] cared about those before he was forced to. And yeah, there certainly were nobles who cared and abided by it, but there's not much in the way of teeth, not reliably enough to be comfortable in that security. The Thirty Years war certainly took those into account (not being sarcastic either), and shit still got burned down plenty.
Well now you are in a whole other century. How about I point out that your daughter isn't safe in her bed because the Barbary pirates kidnap white women and make them sex slaves? Or how the feds love to burn down cities in Georgia these days.
What point are you trying to make here, Mainiac. I already brought up the Hitler example from within a century. You wanna look at the Congo? Stalin? Mao? How aboutHussein? No? You think dictatorship is all good and fine for human rights? You think shit changes magically because time has passed? Human nature does not change, mainiac. There are dick jokes written by Romans found in pompeii. The same complaints about the youth not listening to their elders and how it was all better back when I was a kid have been written by Egyptians thousands and thousands of years ago, as have complaints about how all stories have already been told.
If you're just arguing for the sake of being contrarian, I would ask you to use a better argument than reductio ad absurdum.
Ah... maybe.
I live in NC so maybe I'm distracted by the bad.
Beware of typical mind. :/
Maine has put forth the question of
Ranked Choice Voting. Other states are doing their own stuff, one bit at a time (which I say mostly because I remember other states doing similar-ish things but not which states doing which things >.>).
But then, I choose to be optimistic, so perhaps I just choose not to believe in the doomsday proclamations made by every generation before me and this one as well. Most of them have been false, but maybe the Mayans were just off by a decade. *shrug*
@Reelya: I dunno about you, but I vote for more than the President. I vote for senators and representatives too, in federal and state legislature. And yeah, they nominate people who haven't been elected. But that's the balancing act. It doesn't function well with entirely elected officials, because their incentives are different. But the president certainly isn't everything, and the cabinet doesn't run everything. No, they don't always nominate the best people. But I do think that Charisma is God-stat, that choosing a Supreme Court Justice via popular vote is a poor idea. Neither, it seems to me, is having them appointed by one person in as split a political environment
Congress is involved in rather a lot, even if they've been ineffective lately.