Aquizzar Aquizzar
You spelt his name wrong.
I've stopped caring. I have a funny foreign name, and people are going to mispronounce it.
Sorry about that. Suddenly the text under Ben and in your signature all makes sense.
This all goes back to what Aquizzar was saying about the unprecedented responsibility and influence the President gains in the course of his (or her) extensive contact with the American people throughout the campaign.
This is why ( I assume ) the forefathers didn't draft the Constitution to describe us as a Democracy. Since in a Democracy, the majority of the people decide who and what happens and who they want to be their figurehead. It's a rather detrimental government for a minority (not racial, but someone with varying religion, morals, or what have you.) The Presidential race is the only election race that many people care about. They assume that this race determines the course of the next four years of the country. I seriously wish our government was studied more (or taught better) in schools and reinforced to the children. It kind of depresses me that so many people are ignorant of the law of the land and assume we are a Democracy with a powerful President. It also depresses me that I was ignorant of these as well until this past year.
I would argue that we are a democracy as you define it. Originally, the Constitution was designed to be very limiting of the President in order to prevent something resembling the centralization of power in a tyrannical monarch, and was developed at a time when the country was an active participant in the slave trade, didn't allow women or non-landholders to vote, and in which many people had no access to quality education.
The form of our government has become much more populist since then, granting voting rights to almost all of society. Our understanding of what is possible has also changed: After more than two hundred years, we now know that it is possible to have a central leader with a great deal of power, and still maintain popular government.
The world has changed as well, and with it, people's expectations of government. In the time the Constitution was written, a weak government suited them, because there was relatively little the government was expected to do. But in the 20th and 21st centuries, the government has increasingly become an extremely powerful force, shaping the future of society and the welfare of its people.
I think that in today's world, a powerful leader elected to carry the hopes and dreams of the people makes sense. Bear in mind that the President is not actually as powerful as he acts in any real sense -- it is only because Congress
chooses to cooperate with him that he can make such speeches with any credibility. It is entirely possible for Congress to ignore the policies the President wishes to have implemented. The only reason they don't is because in a sense, he speaks for the people.
We are a Federalist Republic.
I think your interpretation of democracy is too focused on the direct/Athenian democracy. In general, democracy just means that government is controlled by the people by some mechanism, not that the people themselves make the laws, though that's one possibility. While the United States is a federal republic, it is also a representative democracy. The republican aspect of our government is less crucial to its nature than the democractic aspect. For example, Canada and the United Kingdom are monarchies, while the United States is a republic. At the same time, the United States and Canada are federations, while the United Kingdom is not. Despite these differences, I think you'd find any of the countries acceptable, as they are all constitutional representative democracies with strong traditions of political freedom.
A Democracy has a better chance of being twisted into an Oligarchy over time. Think of it this way. You have a nation that is rather weighted toward Christian religious beliefs. If we had a Democracy, all those Christians could vote to ban collectives of people other than those in Christian churches. You are not specifically denying someone the ability to follow whatever religion they want, but you are limiting the influence of other religions by making it illegal to gather. With enough iterations of majority voting you could limit the power in a country to a select group of people who would determine the course of the nation casting everyone else off as insignificant.
It is not the representative nature of government that prevents this, but constitutional restrictions; in this case, the assembly right in the first amendment. A districted first-past-the-post system of representative government like the one used in the United States actually gives representatives a very high incentive to favor majorities over minorities. It complicates the dynamic, but American history is rich with examples of majority tyranny through elected representatives, from small (like Congress intervening in the Terri Schiavo case) to large (like slavery, segregation, and gay rights).