Comments

  • cam . # .
    Constitution\'s get rewritten all the time: Canada rewrote its in the 1980s, Queensland did in 2001. Ourselves, the US and Switzerland are probably the anomolies who have static ones, but even there, the Swiss one is pretty fluid.

    Many nations are less than fifty years old, and even ones that arent, like Germany and Japan, have had radical rewrites after World War II.

    I recall reading somewhere that something like 80% of national flags are under fifty years old. We just make it, as our flag is 53 years old.

    The integrity branch sounds like the GG as rights referee which has appeared here as well. Which is a good role for someone outside of the political process as a non-separate executive form of government would have.

    If the ideas of an expanded liberty are ever to take root in reality, it shall take place in a Copernican framework where executive power is held separately from those who exercise it and separate again from those who direct its use.

    You have confused me here. The copernican model leaves the executive in the legislative as the Prime Minister right? And replaces the Queen with an elected head of state?

    It doesn\'t separate executive power from legislative power. It still remains a Westminster system.

    cam