Sorry TerryM, I am not wrong. The responsibility of the poeple for their country persists in a democracy as well as in any other systems - since the poeple could change each system anyway. I do not see lots of signs in the US-streets shouting for CO2 reduction...
While you are correct regarding the responsibility of U.S. citizens in driving decisions, I think you are seriously overestimating the power of the American public to influence decision making in the political process. And this weakness is not a recent phenomena. It became a salient feature in this country as the industrial revolution transformed the economic landscape.
It took 50 years, from 1880 to 1930, of increasing labor violence as well as the Great Depression before unions won resounding victories to unionize and put Franklin Roosevelt in the White House. Despite these victories, there were plots developed in the 1930's to assassinate the president and that same industrial and financial oligarchy supported Hitler's rise to power in Germany. It wasn't until the U.S. government threatened to put members of the oligarchy in prison that they withdrew most of their support of Hitler. Those hard fought labor gains, which created the American middle class have since been lost as the oligarchy mounted intense efforts, post WWII, to destroy the unions.
There are only two other instances in the 20th century where the American public was able to drive the political process.
It took a decade of increasing violence, including riots, bombings, campus buildings being burned down and the murder of students on campuses before the Vietnam War was ended and it took decades of dramatic violence, including having large portions of major American cities burned to the ground before the Civil Rights movement succeeded in getting legislation passed which, only in part, freed blacks from a 100 year bondage that was every bit as pernicious as the institution of slavery.
If we are going to wait for the American public, through mass political action, to drive the correct decisions regarding fossil fuels, it will take decades and, I believe, a level of violence that will make the violence of the 20th century pale in comparison. I believe the violence will be worse because the decisions we will try to force on the oligarchy attacks the very core of the industrial economy they control.
This is
not something that I am looking forward to. I actually believe it will be horribly counter productive as huge swaths of the American economy will be destroyed, the very infrastructure that we have worked so hard to build in the last 2 centuries. If you tour the cities that were burned in the 1960's large areas of each are still vast wastelands. It has been 50 years and those areas have not rebounded.
I believe we need to open a new front in the battle with the oligarchy and this front must be in the economic sphere. It is here that we can hurt them the most, in the pocketbook. It will be far more effective because the oligarchy is driven by one monumental vice, greed. When they realize they are going to suffer dramatic losses in wealth, and not before, they will come to the bargaining table.