The US as an Elitist System
.... more Protestant, more likely to belong to the religious right, and less likely to have children in school than is the general population (
Debow and
Syer 114). ....
(1853

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)
Domestic and Foreign Policy
.... State candidates also respond more to the interest groups that express their views than they do to the masses who remain silent, as
DeBow and
Syer (1992) note ....
(1801

7

)
Congress and the Presidency
.... State candidates also respond more to the interest groups that express their views than they do to the masses who remain silent, as
DeBow and
Syer (1992) note ....
(1851

7

)
Central Government vs Loose Confederation
....
DeBow and
Syer write about California in particular, but much of what they say applies to the states across the board as they show how disaffection with ....
(1844

7

)
Elites and Power in American Government
.... State candidates also respond more to the interest groups that express their views than they do to the masses who remain silent, as
DeBow and
Syer (1992) note ....
(1838

7

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The Bill of Rights & Democracy
.... long, quite specific and detailed, and, often, the reflection of interest groups' priorities rather than broader constitutional concerns" (
DeBow and
Syer 19). ....
(2161

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Power in the Political Process
.... money. Thus, as they say, "it could still be argued that undue group influence is not desirable" (
DeBow and
Syer 62). Undue influence ....
(2207

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The Original American Constitution & Elitism
....
Debow, Ken, and John
Syer. Power and Politics in California. 5th ed. Boston: Allyn & Bacon, 1997. Miroff, Bruce, Raymond Seidelman, and Todd Swanstrom. ....
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