Generally no. Democracy is primarily the view that the interests of the many outweigh the interests of the few. People jointly vote and the option that receives the majority of the votes becomes the dominant law. However, one of the important aspects of liberal democracy is that there are some rights and responsibilities that are beyond the simple vote of the population and the minorities need to be protected from the majorities. These countermajoritarian requirements are those few times that the interests of the few must be elevated above the interests of the many.
That is the way things are going at present. The real ided is 'majority rule, minority rights' but his is being turned around to 'minority rule, majority no rights'.
False
Dunkeld, Victoria is approximately 250 metres above sea level.
A catwalk is an elevated service platform from which many of the technical functions of a theater, such as lighting and sound, may be manipulated.
In strict political terms the sentence is a self-contradiction as a "Democracy" and a "Republic" are strict opposites. The sentence however attempts to describe a political philosophy, of: A nation of laws built on strict rights; whose representatives (in/of law) are elected by a popular vote.
Kidney issues can cause elevated enzymes. When your kidneys are damaged, your body responds with elevated levels of naturally occurring enzymes.
Bad for Democracy has 256 pages.
Democracy - novel - has 240 pages.
Deterring Democracy has 424 pages.
Yes. We are not really free, and we don't have a true democracy. What we have is a representative democracy. We don't really make decisions. We elect people to make decisions for us, and they often have motives other than our best interests at heart. You might think of a good law that would help many, but if it is not politically expediant, no representative will sponsor it. Also, think of the many things we could say and do a decade ago that we cannot do now. We still have a representative democracy, at least at face value, but we continually seem to be losing freedoms.
Constitutional Monarchy, Socialism, and a Representitive Democracy.
Agriculture.
Well you could say:"The ancient Greeks founded democracy."-or-"The democracy was used by the ancient Greeks after many different types of government."-or-"The United States of America is not a democracy, but is a representative democracy."There are many ways to use "democracy" in a sentence!