menageriekeeper said:The problem with that is that Americans ARE the lawmakers of our land. That is what our votes do. We DO get to decide what the law will be.
Welllllllll.....sort of. The system is so messed up it's hard to know where to start when countering this point.
We have the Supreme Court redefining (instead of interpreting) the Constitution, and legislating from the bench in spite of the fact that it isn't their job to do so. And we can't vote out the Supreme Court Justices. We can vote for a president who MIGHT appoint better judges, but, c'mon, is that even the least bit dependable? The Judges play games with retirement so that the right president will be in office, so they can get their liberal/conservative friends in the court. Even then, the approval process is so politicized... well, you get the idea.
Then there are TONS of laws that do not reflect what the majority of the people want. Our lawmakers are constantly pleasing campaign contributors and themselves rather than their constituents.
And what can we do if we're unhappy with what the government is doing? Not a whole lot. This isn't a democracy. It's a constitutional republic. If it was a democracy (and depending on the practices adopted in the democracy), we might be able to get a vote of no confidence called, after which we'd trade our current lawmakers for new ones. Right now, we have to wait until a term is up, or wait for someone to commit a crime, get caught, get tried (impeached), get convicted, to get them out of office. And that doesn't always work, anyway (Clinton, anyone?). The whole process is so cumbersome few people even want to deal with it.
Anyway, it isn't as simple as "we get to decide". We get to vote and then we usually tolerate the jerks in office until the next time we get to vote, after which we tolerate...etc.