Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Crossroads Of Oppression's End: Liberty Or Greater Tyranny-Part Four South Africa Session Ten

 

The philosophy of entitlement for material benefits must not be engendered. Instead, an environment in which people have a stake in their locality, state/province, and nation must be promoted. People have to feel they can make an impact so that they assume the proper responsibility of a full-fledged citizen of an independent Republic. That is the very nature of enfranchisement and it goes far beyond voting.

Before South Africa could transition itself into a viable Representative Democratic Republic, it had to have a Constitution that established proper and divided governance and also protected the basic rights of all its citizens. Before the fall of Apartheid, that nation was divided into four provinces and ten Black homelands. After the change, South Africa had established nine provinces.

There should have been elections in each province for state/province legislators. All voters should have been 25 or older. One vote should have been assigned to each household. All voters were supposed to publicly vote for one locality officeholder(regardless of population) with Ranked Choice implemented for all eligible candidates, 30 and older. The elected officeholders should not be a participant in any branch of government other than that specific office.

Each elected state/province legislator would have then appointed two people to attend the conference to write the national Constitution. Those two people cannot be a participant in any branch of government.
Once the Constitution was drafted, it needed to be sent back to each state/province for ratification.

Approval from 60% of each state/province legislature and then 2/3rds of all states/provinces would have been needed for the Constitution to be established as the Supreme Charter of the nation.

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