Point about death sentence and primitive democracy well taken.
It is only my opinion.
I am not bashing USA (that was certain social aspects that will take Europe decades or centuries to develop i.e. the irrelevance of ethnicity) I picked it because it is a country that is very well known. I couldn't even start telling about crimes commited by modern democracies in Europe, today's preconceptions in the Balkan countries that are still torturing their people etc. And to add to your argument Serapis, according to one theory the Nazi culture (anti-semitism, the Arian race etc)was actually a distorted version of the existing dominant and at the time legitimate horrific european culture.
The point that I'm trying to get across is that modern democracies are perfectly capable of crimes against humanity (and intra war) as were the ancient greek ones.
Now, Ancient Athens was far from perfect but it was a true democracy. The literal meaning of democracy is that people are the authority. (demos=people, cratia=authority, control). At the time, people were only the «free male men» something that is absolutely ridiculous today.
But they took all decisions. There was constant exchange of ideas and arguments and majority voting was used for every big question. They did not transfer authority to a group of people. It was very inefficient but truly democratic. And perfectly capable of engaging in war to protect its interests.
It is only my opinion.
I am not bashing USA (that was certain social aspects that will take Europe decades or centuries to develop i.e. the irrelevance of ethnicity) I picked it because it is a country that is very well known. I couldn't even start telling about crimes commited by modern democracies in Europe, today's preconceptions in the Balkan countries that are still torturing their people etc. And to add to your argument Serapis, according to one theory the Nazi culture (anti-semitism, the Arian race etc)was actually a distorted version of the existing dominant and at the time legitimate horrific european culture.
The point that I'm trying to get across is that modern democracies are perfectly capable of crimes against humanity (and intra war) as were the ancient greek ones.
Now, Ancient Athens was far from perfect but it was a true democracy. The literal meaning of democracy is that people are the authority. (demos=people, cratia=authority, control). At the time, people were only the «free male men» something that is absolutely ridiculous today.
But they took all decisions. There was constant exchange of ideas and arguments and majority voting was used for every big question. They did not transfer authority to a group of people. It was very inefficient but truly democratic. And perfectly capable of engaging in war to protect its interests.
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