kenberg, on 2012-December-30, 09:24, said:
As I was growing up, I did not hear a lot of talk about dysfunctionality. We produced an enormous number of tanks, fighters and bombers. General Eisenhower had successfully conducted the re-invasion of Europe, General MacArthur has successfully prosecuted the war in the Pacific. The Manhattan Project had produced a weapon that eliminated the need for landing troops in Japan. The Marshall Plan was instrumental in Europe's recovery, including that of former adversaries. American support played a pivotal role in the creation of the United Nations and in the founding of Israel. The GI Bill sent ex-servicemen to college and helped them buy a home.
Times have changed.
The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our Constitution but in ourselves.
I agree America is a great & amazingly generous country, and I have only admiration for its people, (Except in games like soccer & when they accuse successful foreign teams of cheating.) America played a major part in WW2, perhaps the major part, and never had to choose between "guns and butter"; it financed the reconstruction of Europe, and it has since conducted several foreign adventures without seeking to acquire new territory in compensation.
That said, you still have a constitution which encourages stalemate (gridiron?) rather than decision. I understand that you yourselves consider that you have had many ineffectual presidents since WW2: e.g Eisenhower, Kennedy, Carter, and now I venture to predict Obama.
Most progress seems to require breaking the rules/laws, e.g. mandates, or patronage.
Perhaps these suggest the fault may lie in the constitution.
I am not trying to offend anyone, I thought this is generally agreed among your political historians, not so?