BjornP wrote: Tue Jun 05, 2018 1:15 am
Sure, compared to mainland Europe, English monarchs had less power and the English nobility's power was also more consolidated in law. I can't speak to what you are taught or not, but when I think democracy I don’t think rule by nobility.
No doubt that what we today call democracy, owes more to England than Greece (in terms of representative vs direct government), but rule by nobles isn’t democracy. Rome was more democratic than that.
You take land owning nobles, remove titles and hereditary inheritance, and you're left with a land owning electorate. That's what the original electorate was in America. Other than the hereditary titles of the aristocracy, who was allowed to vote in the democracy was very similar.
Mention of the democratic role of parliament in the creation of the grievances that lead to the American revolution is virtually non-existent in American public schools. Even in our declaration the role of parliament is almost ignored, and everything is laid at the feet of the king.
It's something that stood out to me when I was going through the evolution in England and then Britain from the absolute monarchy through the growth in power of parliament. It is mentioned that this evolution happened, but we aren't given specifics, and it is never mentioned that by 1776 this process had been under way for a long time, and that the primary actor at the time of the revolution was not the king, but parliament.
There's too much obfuscation and omission in all of it for me to think it's accidental. You have a figurehead king that gets scapegoated to hell and back for the actions of a parliament that escapes virtually all blame.