Brutkey

bemmesr
@bemmesr@mastodon.social

@benroyce@mastodon.social I've noticed that very few democracies have strong safeguards against a rogue leader ruining or exploiting the system, and even make provisions to allow such a situation. For example, the monarch of the UK is technically able to invite anyone to be the prime minister, despite the expectation that they'll only do so for the leader of the largest party. Relying on ceremony and tradition to keep things working as expected to me seems like a bad idea.

Ben Royce πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡©πŸ‡ΈπŸ‡©
@benroyce@mastodon.social

@bemmesr@mastodon.social

this would be a problem if they had a mad king. but i think if they ever did, the king would be the one to lose, at this point in the uk's history

not that the uk's democracy is squeaky clean, but more that there has to a be a certain will to defend something, as the most important aspect

because
all democracies have some kind of weakness you allude to, if not the exact example you cite


Vassil Nikolov | Васил Николов
@vnikolov@ieji.de

@benroyce@mastodon.social wrote:

this would be a problem if they had a mad king. but i think if they ever did, the king would be the one to lose, at this point in the uk's history
They famously had at least one and he lost indeed.
(George III.)

@bemmesr@mastodon.social