That's a bad comparison of how dire the situation is.
The U.S fighting for independence was Englishmen fighting against their fellow Englishmen all in pip pip jolly good spirits. English parliament actually opposed the war and supported the English colonists in the U.S - we're not fighting an enemy of our friendly chummy fellow ethnicity who aren't even supported by their own government in fighting against us. We're fighting against people who want to enslave us, and all of the west. We're fighting not against some interests who are trying to manage their oversea colonists who they're fairly impartial to.
It was English colonists who wanted their rights as Englishmen, as fought for in the English Civil War the English Bill of Rights.
That's why the U.S is essentially a continuation of England and U.S Constitution a copy of English constitution, some Founding Fathers wanted a Royal Family, which in retrospect may have been a good idea, but the Executive/Monarch/King/President being elected is truer tradition like the original ancient English kings who were elected.
And the POTUS powers are identical to an 18th century English King, even operates with a court where key officers don't sit in cabinet but act as courtiers. Impeachment is taken straight from English Medieval Constitution of trial before Upper House with Lower House acting as prosecutors.
It's the system of rule by:
One (Monarch; Executive/King/President)
Few (Oligarchs; Council/Lords/Senators)
Many (Demos; Masses/Commons/Congress)
It developed in England through the Middle Ages, and really it was always a compromise of a system of compromise between Roman Law and English Law, between Roman Bureaucracy and Anglo Saxon Representation and Consent, compromise between different Churches, different Barons, different Kings, different revolts of peasants. Not some sort of unique things just thought up in the Modern Age but instead is medieval and all U.S systems of politics and law and power are rooted in medieval systems.
This is not a fight between some Englishmen over whether some colonists get their rights as Englishmen where the Empire isn't even supported by its own Parliament in a conflict against their own colonists. We're not just looking down the barrel of the end of U.S as we know it due to demographic change, but we're looking at the end of western civilization as we know it.
That's a bad comparison of how dire the situation is.
The U.S fighting for independence was Englishmen fighting against their fellow Englishmen all in pip pip jolly good spirits. English parliament actually opposed the war and supported the English colonists in the U.S - we're not fighting an enemy of our friendly chummy fellow ethnicity who aren't even supported by their own government in fighting against us. We're fighting against people who want to enslave us, and all of the west. We're fighting not against some interests who are trying to manage their oversea colonists who they're fairly impartial to.
It was English colonists who wanted their rights as Englishmen, as fought for in the English Civil War the English Bill of Rights.
That's why the U.S is essentially a continuation of England and U.S Constitution a copy of English constitution, some Founding Fathers wanted a Royal Family, which in retrospect may have been a good idea, but the Executive/Monarch/King/President being elected is truer tradition like the original ancient English kings who were elected. And the POTUS powers are identical to an 18th century English King, even operates with a court where key officers don't sit in cabinet but act as courtiers. Impeachment is taken straight from English Medieval Constitution of trial before Upper House with Lower House acting as prosecutors.
It's the system of rule by: One (Monarch; Executive/King/President) Few (Oligarchs; Council/Lords/Senators) Many (Demos; Masses/Commons/Congress)
It developed in England through the Middle Ages, and really it was always a compromise of a system of compromise between Roman Law and English Law, between Roman Bureaucracy and Anglo Saxon Representation and Consent, compromise between different Churches, different Barons, different Kings, different revolts of peasants. Not some sort of unique things just thought up in the Modern Age but instead is medieval and all U.S systems of politics and law and power are rooted in medieval systems.
This is not a fight between some Englishmen over whether some colonists get their rights as Englishmen where the Empire isn't even supported by its own Parliament in a conflict against their own colonists. We're not just looking down the barrel of the end of U.S as we know it due to demographic change, but we're looking at the end of western civilization as we know it.