>If something is a rule then the majority decided it should be that way.
Few systems are direct democracies. Isn't it more likely the people decided the rule maker should be who the rule maker is (or makers are) and the rule maker(s) then decided what the law should be. And that is just some of the political systems you can model.
Think of like how congress like a <25% approval rating but most of them keep getting voted back in.
Few systems are direct democracies. Isn't it more likely the people decided the rule maker should be who the rule maker is (or makers are) and the rule maker(s) then decided what the law should be. And that is just some of the political systems you can model.
Think of like how congress like a <25% approval rating but most of them keep getting voted back in.