Originally posted by Kucinich
Yup. The US was non-democratic then. It was close to democracy, but not there. It was more democratic than any of the monarchies in Europe, but not a democracy.
Originally posted by GePap
Yup. The US was non-democratic then. It was close to democracy, but not there. It was more democratic than any of the monarchies in Europe, but not a democracy.
The notion of democracy was invented by a society in which only a small potion of the full population can vote. Whether you would consider it democratic is irrelevant-the US was a dmeocracy, and no, just the right to make contracts does not define Capitalism.
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