The Road To Democracy

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The Road to Democracy Democracy has been a huge part of the United States since the dawn of the constitution. Although the road to achieving democracy has been difficult if not impossible at times, in the end many figured democracy was the way to go. When Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Pain, along with the rest of the founding fathers, wrote and created the articles and constitution they envisioned a nation run by the people for the people. Democracy not only gives the people the ability to express their beliefs and values but it endorses a system in which the majority rule and thus shifts the power from the few and powerful to the weak and many. But how much should one risk in order to ensure a democratic government in the United States? I believe that democracy is very necessary and vital in order to have a successfully run government, not to mention the very reason people all over the world come to the United States is to live the American Dream. That dream consists of a democratic government ensuring peace, liberty and the pursuit of happiness to all of its citizens. I was born and raised in the United States and thus have been blessed with rights and values offered by a democratic nation; however, I have been to other places of the world and know people where the simple basic rights we take for granted here in the states are literally nonexistent there. The key element that makes democracy important to me and others alike is the distribution of powers and the ability to recognize the diverse identities that come with it. With that in mind, if the democratic government of the United States as we know it were ever to be in turmoil, I would do whatever it takes as long as the circumstance was deemed appropriate to achieve the democratic goals of the nation. Perhaps the most important aspect of democracy is the distribution of powers through the notion of

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