When election time comes around again, they don't vote for that leader and they try their luck with the next politician.
they mark the swastica in Jew blood
the get washed
Mainly because their conception of democracy was distinct from our own. They saw democracy in a Greek, classical sense, where the people had direct power and tyranny abounded (Ancient Athens). The leaders were conscientious of the issue of a majority potentially ruling unjustly and with an iron fist.
AnswerIt was Athens, in ancient Greece. Democracy was limited to citizens (excluding women and slaves) and not everyone who lived there had the right to vote. Nevertheless, Athens practiced the first form of democracy anywhere. Read more: http://wiki.answers.com/What_city-state_is_considered_the_birthplace_of_democracy#ixzz1DWIx2HG6
Athenian democracy in Ancient Greece. But that democracy only concerned free Athenian adult male citizens, not children, not women, not slaves, not foreigners. Sounds like a good democracy for me.
Athens
Athens
The leaders of Athens were unhappy with the sophists because the sophists argued that the rulers invented the gods in order to control the people of Athens
Democracy did not basically arise out of all of Ancient Greece but out of Athens that has been called the cradle of democracy. It was established in Athens through the continuous reorganizations In 594 BC Solon was chosen as the first archon which was similar to a prime minister. He then established jury courts and increased the rights of the people.
They were both superpowers in Ancient Greece, and were the leaders of their alliances - the Peloponnessian league and the Athenian Empire.
ancient athens
There really was no 'ancient Greece' if by that you mean a single country with leaders. There were only city-states -- each with its own leaders. How to get rid of leaders? Killing them is a tried and true way. Otherwise, at least in Athens, they were a true democracy -- every free citizen got a vote.
direct democracy
the real leaders of Athens were Solon , Peisistratus , Cleisthenes , & Pericles but the first one was Pericles ;]
The leaders of Athens were unhappy with the sophists because the sophists argued that the rulers invented the gods in order to control the people of Athens.
the goverment of ancient athens like a democracy
Ancient Sparta focused more on military achievements and ancient Athens thought more of academic knowledge. Athens were a democracy and Sparta was an oligarchy
Yes, ancient Athens was actually the birthplace of democracy.
Foreigners were not allowed to vote in ancient Athens.