sweden number 1 was obvious but Australia 8 where is USA on this? haha
This is based on 2006 - it is 2 years old. Why didn't you link to the most recent one?
Somebody doesn't know the difference between de facto and de jure. Or precedent. Or what a bill of rights even means (it can be as small or large as the country wants it to be - America's being extremely small, and to their obvious detriment, as it causes all sorts of confusion by essentially saying only what the government can't do, not what it can).WTF - Australia doesn't even have a bill of rights
- if we did Compulsory Student Unionism would be illegal :wave:
Are you sure that a inflexible and unalterable set of definite rights and responsibilities is the way to go?WTF - Australia doesn't even have a bill of rights
- if we did Compulsory Student Unionism would be illegal :wave:
Communist regimes like to use words like 'democracy' and 'republic' as part of their propaganda, even though they're often neither, that little seed of doubt is one of many that makes it that little bit harder for people to rebel.lol Democratic People's Republic of Korea is 167.
lol Democratic People's Republic of Korea is 167.
It uses a democratic system though?America is NOT a democracy.
Nowhere in their constitution does it mention democracy, It is a republic.
There's a difference.
I'm pretty sure that this study does not go by a documented establishment of a democracy, but the government's implication that it is democratic by the policies and notions of governing that it employs.America is NOT a democracy.
Nowhere in their constitution does it mention democracy, It is a republic.
There's a difference.