The Misleading Nature of Military Death Rates May 26, 2026
Posted by Chris Mark in Uncategorized, War, weapons and tactics.Tags: Band of Brothers, Eighth Air Force, History, MACV-SOG, Military History, politics, Risk Analysis, statistics, Submarine Warfare, vietnam, Vietnam War, War, WWII
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Someone on Memorial day posted on social media that submariners suffered the highest death rate of any American service in World War II. As a comat veteran who holds Memorial Day as a somber occasion it caused me to pause and think. While the raw stats suggest that the statement is true, is also very nearly meaningless as a statement about danger — and understanding why is one of the most useful lessons in how a single, accurate number can completely mislead you.
The American submarine force was small. Roughly 16,000 men made war patrols, and about 3,500 of them never came home, with 52 boats lost. That works out to a fatality rate near 22 percent — the highest of any U.S. branch. Historian Donald Miller, in Masters of the Air, makes the point bluntly: of all the branches of the American armed forces, only submarine crews had a higher fatality rate than his bomber boys, at almost 23 percent.
Now set that against the Eighth Air Force, which lost about 26,000 men killed — more fatalities than the entire United States Marine Corps. In raw numbers, the bomber campaign looks far deadlier than the silent service. Both pictures are accurate. They simply measure different things, and neither one, by itself, tells you how dangerous it was to actually do the job.
Rate Versus Count
The first trap is confusing a rate with a count. “Highest death rate” is a proportion: deaths divided by everyone who held the role. “Most deaths” is a raw tally. A small, lethal specialty can top the rate chart while contributing a tiny share of total deaths, simply because its denominator is small. That is exactly the submarine service — a few thousand deaths out of a few thousand men produces a brutal percentage.
The bomber force generates the opposite illusion. The 26,000 dead is a frightening number, but 350,000 men served in the Eighth Air Force, and most of them were ground crew and support staff who were never in danger. Measured against the 210,000 who actually flew combat, the death rate was about 12.4 percent. Measured against everyone in uniform, it falls to around 7 percent. The raw body count reflects the size of the force, not the danger of the seat.
So once we strip out the size disparity and compare combat men to combat men, the submariner — at roughly 22 to 23 percent — was in the statistically deadlier billet, and the bomber crews, at about 12 percent, come second. If a death rate were the same thing as danger, we could stop here.
It isn’t.
Danger Lives in the Exposure, Not the Total
A death rate is a cumulative number — the odds you eventually died, summed over your entire time in the role. What it conceals is the variable that actually defines danger: how much risk you absorbed per unit of exposure, and how much exposure you were forced to take. Epidemiologists separate these as cumulative incidence (did you die at all) versus the hazard rate (how lethal each moment was). War tells the same story.
A bomber crew’s exposure was tightly capped. A tour was 25 missions early in the war, later raised to 30 and then 35. Each mission ran about six to nine hours; the famous Memphis Belle logged 148 hours across her 25 missions, under six hours apiece. Complete the longest tour and you had spent, at most, around 245 hours in the air — roughly ten days of cumulative flying. That cap is the entire reason the cumulative death rate looks “only” moderate. Per hour aloft, the danger was savage. In the brutal 1942–43 period, of the men who flew the original 25-mission tour, only about a third survived it; by October 1943, fewer than one in four crewmen could realistically expect to finish. The job didn’t become survivable until escort fighters won air superiority — by 1945, 81 percent completed a full 35-mission tour.
A submariner, by contrast, accumulated his 22 percent over an enormous span of time. A single war patrol lasted six to eight weeks — a thousand hours or more continuously inside the kill zone — and most men made several. So while the submariner’s lifetime odds were worse, the bomber crewman faced a far higher chance of death per hour of combat, by something on the order of five to ten times. The two jobs were lethal in opposite shapes: the submarine was a long, grinding exposure; the bomber was a short, concentrated burst of extreme danger, repeated until your luck or the war ran out.
This is the heart of the matter. A short tour with a horrific per-mission hazard and a long tour with a milder per-hour hazard can land on the very same headline death rate. The number hides which one you were.

Figure 1. Approximate death rate per hour of combat exposure. The submarine held the worse lifetime odds, but a bomber crewman faced roughly eight times the risk per hour in the air.
MACV-SOG: The Law of Small Numbers at Its Deadliest
If you want the purest illustration of how exposure and small denominators distort a death rate, look at the most dangerous billet of the modern era: the covert reconnaissance teams of the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam – Studies and Observations Group (MACV-SOG).
During the Vietnam war SOG teams ran cross-border missions into Laos, Cambodia, and North Vietnam in tiny “spike teams” — typically two or three Americans led by a “One-Zero” plus a handful of indigenous troops. Its recon men posted a casualty rate that exceeded 100 percent, described as the highest sustained American loss rate since the Civil War. In 1968, every SOG recon man was wounded at least once, and about half were killed.
Two statistical points make SOG essential to this discussion. First, the denominator was minuscule — of roughly 2,000 men who served in SOG, only about 400 to 600 actually ran recon and direct-action missions. This is the law of small numbers: tiny populations produce extreme, volatile rates that large forces never show. A rate above 100 percent is impossible for a big army and routine for a few hundred men hit repeatedly. Second, that 100-plus percent is a casualty rate — killed plus wounded — and it tops 100 only because individual men were wounded multiple times. Apply the same discipline we used on the bombers and the death rate among recon men sits closer to half in the worst years. The categories matter, and conflating “casualty” with “killed” is how the number gets abused.
SOG also fits the bomber pattern in a way worth naming: it was all-volunteer, and its danger was delivered in a relatively small number of discrete missions, each lasting only days, rather than spread thin across a long deployment. The lethality was per-mission, and per-mission it was off the charts. (The flip side of that intensity: SOG recorded a kill ratio of 158 to 1 in 1970, the highest in U.S. military history.)
Easy Company: When Replacements Hide the Body Count
The final distortion is the one most people miss, and the Band of Brothers company illustrates it perfectly. E Company, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, jumped into Normandy, Holland, and Bastogne. It was formed at Camp Toccoa with about 140 men. By the end of the war, 366 men had served in its ranks, and 49 were killed in action.
Run the naive math and you get a death rate around 13 percent — comparable to bomber aircrew, and apparently far less dangerous than the submarine service. That number is a lie of the denominator. The company’s standing strength was only about 140, yet 366 men cycled through it. Easy was effectively destroyed and rebuilt more than twice over. It jumped into Market Garden with 154 men and came out with 98; it had already taken 65 casualties in Normandy. Counted against the men who were actually present at any given moment, the company suffered well over 100 percent casualties. The 13 percent figure is diluted because the denominator kept refilling with fresh replacements who hadn’t yet been hit.
Notice, too, that almost no Easy Company men became prisoners — like the submariners, their losses converted into killed and wounded rather than capture. A downed bomber crewman could parachute and survive as a POW; an infantryman in a Bastogne foxhole or a submariner in a sinking boat had no such exit. The shape of the casualties is as informative as the count.
So How Do You Actually Measure Danger?
A headline death rate flattens at least three distinct things into one misleading figure: the intensity of each exposure (per mission, per hour), the duration of exposure (how long, how many times you went out), and the denominator (small units and replacement churn that warp the percentage). The submarine looks worst by lifetime odds. The bomber looks worst per hour of combat. SOG looks worst per mission and shows how small numbers break the scale entirely. Easy Company shows how a steady stream of replacements can bury the true cost inside a tame-looking percentage.

Figure 2. The four headline death rates as commonly cited. Each is measured on a different basis — a peak year versus the whole war, a small recon subset versus everyone who served, and a figure diluted by constant replacements. Lined up as equals, they invite exactly the false conclusions this article warns against.
The honest question was never “what fraction of them died.” It is “how likely was a man to die each time he went out, and how many times was he made to go.” Answer those two, and the statistic finally tells the truth. Quote only the first number, and you can prove almost anything — including that the deadliest jobs of the war weren’t very dangerous at all. On Memorial day, remember those who gave all for our freedoms. Whether they were killed in combat or died in training. They all served and died for us.
References
- Miller, Donald L. Masters of the Air: America’s Bomber Boys Who Fought the Air War Against Nazi Germany. Simon & Schuster, 2006. (Eighth Air Force fatalities; submarine fatality comparison; tour-completion statistics.)
- 398th Bomb Group Memorial Association, “One in Twenty — The 398th’s Killed in Action.” (12.38 percent mortality among 210,000 combat aircrew; tour-survival rates by year.) https://www.398th.org/History/KIA/index.html
- Office of the Surgeon General, U.S. Army. Wound Ballistics in World War II, Chapter 9 — Eighth Air Force battle-casualty survey. (MIA resolution: roughly 40 percent killed, 60 percent survived as POW, wounded, or evaders.) https://achh.army.mil/history/book-wwii-woundblstcs-chapter9/
- Plaster, John L. SOG: The Secret Wars of America’s Commandos in Vietnam. Simon & Schuster, 1997. (Recon casualty rates; team structure; cross-border operations.)
- HistoryNet, “How Top-Secret Commando Unit SOG Took on the Most Dangerous Missions in Vietnam.” (Casualty rate exceeding 100 percent; 1968 figures; 158-to-1 kill ratio.) https://www.historynet.com/studies-and-observations-group-vietnam/
- The National Interest, “Inside the Daring Missions of MACV-SOG.” (Approximately 2,000 served in SOG; 400–600 ran recon and direct action.)
- Ambrose, Stephen E. Band of Brothers: E Company, 506th Regiment, 101st Airborne from Normandy to Hitler’s Eagle’s Nest. Simon & Schuster, 1992. (Market Garden strength figures; Normandy and Bastogne casualties.)
- TogetherWeServed, “Famous Army Unit: Easy Company, 506th Infantry Regiment.” (140 original members; 366 total served; 49 killed in action.)
Note: Figures for elite and small units, especially SOG, are frequently dramatized. Where casualty rates exceed 100 percent, that figure reflects killed plus wounded (with multiple woundings per man), not a death rate. Comparisons above use matched combat populations wherever possible.
MY LATEST BOOK RELEASED! “The Science of Security” May 16, 2026
Posted by Chris Mark in cyberespionage, cybersecurity, Industry News, InfoSec & Privacy, Laws and Leglslation, Piracy & Maritime Security, Risk & Risk Management, security, security theater.Tags: ai, artificial-intelligence, cybersecurity, data breach, History, InfoSec, Maritime Security, philosophy, Piracy & Maritime Security, risk management, security, technology
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Announcing Scientia Securitatis: The Science of Security

After 34 years across nearly every security domain that exists — armed physical security at an overseas critical installation, combat force protection, security in a regional hospital’s psychiatric ward, payment-card industry compliance, armed maritime contracting off the East African coast, and a return to enterprise cybersecurity that has occupied the past decade — I have written the book I wish someone had written when I started.
Scientia Securitatis: The Science of Security — Theory, Frameworks, and Practice is available now.
The gap this book is intended to fill
The security profession does not lack books. Walk into any bookstore, scan any conference vendor floor, search any retailer’s security category, and you will find more material on cybersecurity, physical security, risk management, military theory, criminology, intelligence analysis, and organizational resilience than any single practitioner could read in a career. The field is overwhelmed with information.
What it lacks is integration.
Each security domain has developed its own vocabulary, its own frameworks, its own bestsellers, its own consultants. Each domain — when traced carefully to its analytical roots — is reaching for the same underlying concepts the next domain over named differently. Practitioners in physical and cybersecurity are working on the same analytical problems and rarely speak to one another. When they do, they discover that they have been duplicating each other’s work for decades.
Scientia Securitatis is an attempt to make that recognition the starting point of professional practice rather than an accident a few practitioners stumble into late in their careers.
What’s in the book
The book runs to 525 pages across 11 chapters and three appendices. It develops four original analytical frameworks:
- The Mark Heptad — a taxonomy of seven adversary motivations (financial, espionage, war/defense, facilitation, hacktivism, revenge, nuisance) that maps directly to deterrence strategy
- The IMCM Framework — Ignorance, Mistake, Complacency, Malice — for classifying human-induced vulnerabilities and matching them to specific interventions
- The DIVE Framework — Direction, Intensity, Vulnerability, Exposure — for assessing specific exposure surfaces
- The Multiplicative Security Model — the mathematical basis for defense-in-depth, with implications for how security architecture should actually combine
These original frameworks sit within a broader analytical apparatus drawn from criminology (Cohen and Felson’s Routine Activity Theory, Cornish and Clarke’s Twenty-Five Techniques of Situational Crime Prevention), cognitive science (Kahneman and Tversky on judgment under uncertainty), military theory (Sun Tzu, Clausewitz, contemporary unrestricted warfare doctrine), and systems-safety scholarship (James Reason’s Swiss Cheese Model, Charles Perrow’s normal-accident theory).
The book also examines — and critically engages — the victim-blaming reflex that dominates post-incident analysis, drawing on the foundational criminological literature on victim precipitation and contemporary case studies including Equifax, OPM, Target, and Snowflake.
A note on the Latin title
Scientia Securitatis translates as “the science of security,” and the choice was deliberate. The Latin signals that the book engages security as a serious analytical discipline whose intellectual roots long predate the cybersecurity industry’s tendency to treat its problems as historically unprecedented. The phenomena security examines are ancient; the framework for studying them rigorously has been available since at least the mid-20th century. The book argues that practitioners have, with rare exceptions, declined to use it.
Who this book is for
This book is for the practitioner who has noticed that decades of escalating security investment have not produced proportional security gains, and who wants to understand why. It is for the security executive building defensible programs across multiple domains. The policy professional confronting unrestricted warfare doctrine. The risk and compliance leader who suspects that frameworks alone are not stopping sophisticated adversaries. The graduate student approaching security as an analytical discipline rather than a job category.
It is not a tactical handbook. It is not a configuration guide. It is the analytical apparatus that determines whether tactical choices are well-made — the apparatus the field has been operating without.
Where to get it
Scientia Securitatis: The Science of Security is available now on Amazon in eBook, paperback, and hardcover formats:
If you find the book useful, please consider leaving a review. Self-published analytical nonfiction lives and dies by word-of-mouth among the practitioners it was written for — and a thoughtful Amazon review from a working professional is worth more to other professionals than any amount of marketing.
— Chris Mark
A Constitutional Republic IS a Democracy: Setting the Record Straight May 9, 2026
Posted by Chris Mark in Politics.Tags: democracy, History, News, philosophy, politics
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By Christopher Mark

Every election cycle, the same claim resurfaces on social media and around dinner tables: “The United States is not a democracy—it is a constitutional republic.” The statement is delivered with the confidence of someone who has just discovered a secret the rest of the country missed. It sounds authoritative and precise. It is also fundamentally wrong. The confusion stems from treating “democracy” and “republic” as mutually exclusive categories, when in fact they describe different aspects of the same system. Democracy is a broad classification of government defined by popular sovereignty—the principle that political authority derives from the people (Georgetown University, 2025). A constitutional republic is simply one institutional form that democratic governance can take.
The Origins of Democracy
The word “democracy” comes from two Greek words: dēmos meaning “people” and kratos meaning “rule” or “power.” Combined, demokratia literally means “rule by the people” (Britannica, 2024). The concept emerged in ancient Athens during the 5th century BCE, where eligible citizens participated directly in political decision-making by voting on laws and policies themselves. Athenian democracy was direct rather than representative—there were no elected officials making decisions on behalf of citizens (National Geographic Education, 2024). It was also limited by modern standards, excluding women, enslaved people, and non-citizens from participation. Even so, it established a foundational principle that would echo through history: legitimate government derives its authority from the governed, not from hereditary kings or claims of divine right (Georgetown University, 2025).
Why “Democracy” Is Not in the Constitution
The U.S. Constitution does not use the word “democracy,” and this omission has become one of the most frequently cited—and most frequently misunderstood—facts in American political discourse. The omission was not accidental, but it was more nuanced than most commentators acknowledge. In Federalist No. 10, James Madison drew a sharp distinction between a “pure democracy”—where citizens assemble and govern directly—and a “republic,” where elected representatives govern on behalf of the people (Madison, 1787). The Framers had studied classical history extensively and associated direct democracy with instability, mob rule, and factional conflict that eventually led to collapse (Origins, Ohio State University, 2024). But Madison’s distinction was not as clean as modern commentators suggest. In other writings, Madison himself defined a republic as a government that derives its authority “directly or indirectly from the great body of the people”—a definition that sounds remarkably like democracy (U.S. Embassy Argentina, 2023). The Framers chose the word “republic” partly because “democracy” carried negative political connotations at the time and partly because it was the closest available term with respectable classical precedent for what they were building (Origins, Ohio State University, 2024).
Democracy as a Spectrum
Modern political science treats democracy not as a simple yes-or-no label but as a spectrum ranging from full democracy to full autocracy. One of the most widely used frameworks for measuring this is the Polity Project, which has evaluated political systems worldwide since 1800 (Center for Systemic Peace, 2020). The project scores countries from -10 (full autocracy) to +10 (consolidated democracy) based on three core criteria: the competitiveness and openness of political participation, the existence of institutional constraints on executive power, and guarantees of civil liberties (Marshall & Gurr, 2020). Scores of +6 to +10 indicate democracies; scores of -5 to +5 indicate anocracies (mixed systems that combine democratic and autocratic features); and scores of -6 to -10 indicate autocracies (Center for Systemic Peace, 2020). According to recent Polity data, countries scoring +10 (full democracy) include Australia, Canada, Germany, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and Switzerland (World Population Review, 2026; Polity data series, 2018). At the other end of the spectrum, Saudi Arabia and Qatar score -10 (full autocracy) (Polity data series, 2018). Russia scored +4 (an anocracy leaning democratic), while Singapore scored -2 (an anocracy leaning autocratic) (Polity data series, 2018).
The United States historically scored between +9 and +10 on the Polity scale, firmly in the democracy category. However, in 2020 the Center for Systemic Peace calculated that the United States had dropped to a score of +5, temporarily placing it below the democracy threshold and into the anocracy category (Center for Systemic Peace, 2020). That score has since improved, but the episode illustrates precisely what the Polity framework is designed to show: democratic status is not a permanent, unchanging characteristic but depends on the health and functioning of political institutions. This scoring system helps us understand that democracy is a matter of degree, not kind—countries are more or less democratic based on measurable institutional features, not on what they call themselves (Mark, 2016).
Different Forms of Democratic Governance
Saying the United States is a republic instead of a democracy commits a fundamental category error—like saying a poodle is not a dog because it is a poodle. A republic is simply one specific subtype of democracy. Democratic countries around the world implement the core principle of popular sovereignty—government by the people—through many different institutional structures, each with distinct advantages and trade-offs (Georgetown University, 2025).
Presidential systems separate the executive and legislative branches into independent institutions with their own electoral mandates and accountability mechanisms. The United States exemplifies this model: the president is elected separately from Congress, serves as both head of state (ceremonial representative of the nation) and head of government (chief executive officer), and cannot be removed by Congress except through the impeachment process (U.S. Embassy Argentina, 2023). This separation creates checks and balances but can also produce gridlock when different parties control different branches. Other presidential democracies include Brazil, Mexico, and the Philippines (Council on Foreign Relations Education, 2025). The key defining feature is that the executive does not depend on legislative confidence to remain in office.
Parliamentary systems work very differently by concentrating executive power within the legislature rather than separating it. In these systems, voters elect a parliament, and the parliament then chooses a prime minister from among its members—almost always the leader of the majority party or coalition (Annenberg Classroom, 2023). The prime minister serves as head of government and remains directly accountable to parliament; if parliament passes a vote of no confidence, the prime minister must resign or call new elections (EBSCO Research Starters, 2025). Examples include the United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, Japan, India, Italy, and Australia (Annenberg Classroom, 2023; Study.com, 2016). Some parliamentary systems retain constitutional monarchs (like the UK and Japan) who serve as ceremonial heads of state with little real power, while others (like Germany and Italy) have elected presidents who fill that largely ceremonial role (Study.com, 2016). The advantage of parliamentary systems is that they rarely experience divided government or gridlock; the disadvantage is that power can be more concentrated and less checked.
Semi-presidential systems split the difference by combining features of both models. In these systems, a directly elected president shares executive power with a prime minister who is accountable to the legislature (Wikipedia, Semi-presidential system, 2003). France pioneered this model under its Fifth Republic constitution: the president handles foreign policy and defense while the prime minister manages domestic policy and the parliament (Wikipedia, Parliamentary system, 2003). The balance of power between president and prime minister can shift depending on whether they come from the same political party (International IDEA, 2025). Other examples include Portugal, Romania, Lithuania, and Mongolia (Wikipedia, Semi-presidential system, 2003). These systems attempt to combine the democratic legitimacy of direct presidential election with the flexibility and responsiveness of parliamentary governance, though they can sometimes produce confusion about who is actually in charge.
Federal democracies add another layer by distributing governmental power vertically across national, state or provincial, and sometimes local levels. The United States, Germany, Canada, and Australia all use federal structures to accommodate regional diversity, allowing states or provinces to maintain significant autonomy over certain policy areas while the national government handles others (Georgetown University, 2025). By contrast, unitary democracies like the United Kingdom, New Zealand, and France centralize authority in the national government while still maintaining full democratic accountability to voters. Neither federal nor unitary structure is inherently more or less democratic—they simply reflect different approaches to organizing democratic power across territory (Georgetown University, 2025).
Direct democracy allows citizens to vote directly on legislation rather than relying exclusively on representatives. Switzerland incorporates the most extensive direct democratic mechanisms of any modern nation, holding frequent referenda at both cantonal (similar to state) and national levels on everything from tax policy to infrastructure projects (Liberties.eu, 2023). Swiss citizens can propose constitutional amendments through petition, and major policy changes often require popular approval (Georgetown University, 2025). Even Switzerland, however, combines direct democracy with representative institutions—it remains a federal parliamentary republic. No modern nation-state operates as a pure direct democracy on the Athenian model, but many democracies incorporate elements of direct citizen participation through ballot initiatives, referenda, and recall elections (Liberties.eu, 2023).
All of these systems—presidential, parliamentary, semi-presidential, federal, unitary, and those incorporating direct democratic elements—qualify as democracies because political authority ultimately rests with the people through regular, competitive elections and constitutional protections for civil liberties (U.S. Embassy Argentina, 2023). The institutional mechanisms differ, but the foundational principle remains the same.
Democratic Longevity and the Evolution of Suffrage
The United States was long considered the world’s oldest continuous democracy, and by some measures that claim was historically accurate—with important qualifications (Visual Capitalist, 2019). The designation depends heavily on how you define “continuous” and what standards you apply for measuring democratic status. When the United States dropped to a Polity score of +5 in 2020, it temporarily lost its classification as a full democracy, and Switzerland—which maintains a perfect +10 score—became recognized as holding the longest continuous record of full democratic governance (Center for Systemic Peace, 2020; World Population Review, 2026). New Zealand and the United Kingdom also have strong claims to democratic longevity, though the UK only achieved universal suffrage gradually and did not extend voting rights to all adults until the 20th century (Visual Capitalist, 2019).
On the question of universal suffrage—perhaps the fullest expression of democratic participation—New Zealand holds the most distinguished record. In 1893, New Zealand became the first self-governing country in the world to grant all women, including Māori women, the right to vote in national elections, making its suffrage achievement genuinely comprehensive for its era (NZ History, 2024). The United States did not legally guarantee women the right to vote until the 19th Amendment was ratified in 1920, and even then, discriminatory practices prevented millions of African Americans from voting. The United States did not achieve truly universal suffrage in practice until the Voting Rights Act of 1965 removed legal barriers to Black voter registration and participation in the South. These milestones highlight an important truth: democracy is not a static achievement but an evolving process that requires constant vigilance and expansion of rights.
Conclusion
The United States is a constitutional republic, and it is also a democracy. These two facts are not in conflict—they are complementary descriptions of the same system of government viewed at different levels of abstraction. “Democracy” describes the fundamental source of political authority: the people (Georgetown University, 2025). “Constitutional republic” describes the specific institutional structure through which that popular authority is exercised: through elected representatives operating within a framework of constitutional limits designed to protect individual rights and prevent tyranny of the majority (Annenberg Classroom, 2018).
The Framers of the Constitution did not reject democratic principles when they avoided using the word “democracy.” Instead, they designed an ingenious system to channel democratic sovereignty through institutions of representation, constitutional constraints, and checks and balances that would prevent the concentration of power while maintaining popular control (Origins, Ohio State University, 2024). Representative democracy in the United States is constitutional precisely because it is both limited and empowered by the supreme law—the Constitution—for the ultimate purpose of protecting the rights of all citizens (Annenberg Classroom, 2018). The system they created was, and remains, fundamentally democratic in its source of authority even as it is republican in its institutional structure.
Those who insist the United States is not a democracy are not defending a constitutional principle or revealing a hidden truth. They are demonstrating a misunderstanding of both political science terminology and American constitutional history (Origins, Ohio State University, 2024). The distinction between democracy and republic is not a distinction between opposites but between a broad category and one specific form within that category. Understanding this resolves the apparent contradiction and clarifies what the American system of government actually is: a democratic constitutional republic, deriving its just powers from the consent of the governed.
References
Annenberg Classroom. (2018). Democracy, representative and constitutional. University of Pennsylvania Annenberg Public Policy Center. https://www.annenbergclassroom.org
Annenberg Classroom. (2023). Parliamentary system. University of Pennsylvania Annenberg Public Policy Center. https://www.annenbergclassroom.org
Britannica. (2024). Democracy. https://www.britannica.com/topic/democracy
Center for Systemic Peace. (2020). Polity project: United States. https://www.systemicpeace.org
Council on Foreign Relations Education. (2025). Different types of government. https://education.cfr.org
EBSCO Research Starters. (2025). Parliamentary system. https://www.ebsco.com/research-starters/history/parliamentary-system
Georgetown University School of Foreign Service. (2025). What is democracy? https://government.georgetown.edu
International IDEA. (2025). Semi-presidentialism as power sharing: Constitutional reform after the Arab Spring. https://www.idea.int
Liberties.eu. (2023). Different types of democracy and their main characteristics. https://www.liberties.eu
Madison, J. (1787). Federalist No. 10. The Federalist Papers.
Mark, C. (2016). Autocracy, anocracy, and democracy: “Verbal masterbableep.” Global Security, Privacy, & Risk Management. https://globalriskinfo.com
Mark, H.R. (2005). The role of the United States foreign policy in the global adoption of democratic governance [Doctoral dissertation, Auburn University]. Directed by Dr. Jill Crystal.
Marshall, M. G., & Gurr, T. R. (2020). Polity5: Political regime characteristics and transitions, 1800-2018. Center for Systemic Peace. https://www.systemicpeace.org
National Geographic Education. (2024). Democracy: Ancient Greece. https://education.nationalgeographic.org
NZ History. (2024). New Zealand women and the vote. https://nzhistory.govt.nz
Origins, Ohio State University. (2024). The United States: Democracy or republic? https://origins.osu.edu
Polity data series. (2018). Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polity_data_series
Study.com. (2016). Parliamentary government: Definition & examples. https://study.com
U.S. Embassy Argentina. (2023). U.S. government. https://ar.usembassy.gov
Visual Capitalist. (2019). Mapped: The world’s oldest democracies. https://visualcapitalist.com
Wikipedia. (2003). Parliamentary system. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parliamentary_system
Wikipedia. (2003). Semi-presidential system. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semi-presidential_system
World Population Review. (2026). Polity data series by country 2026. https://worldpopulationreview.com
Holiday Gift Book Recommendations December 15, 2016
Posted by Chris Mark in Uncategorized.Tags: best seller, books, Gwynne, History, mary roach, Recommended books, Zuckoff
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As we march toward Christmas, Hanukkah and, for some, even Festivus (you know…for the rest of us)..books are always great gifts. Here are some of the better books that I have read over the past ten years or so that could make a reader and history buff happy. Have a Happy and Safe Holiday Season! I had to add some Mary Roach 😉 Have fun!
























