Yekaterina Duntsova, a former journalist and city councillor campaigning for peace and "democratic processes", was rejected by the Russian Central Electoral Committee as a potential candidate due to "errors in documents".
The law / constitution requires that elections be held. You can't break the law without a lot of people noticing. But you can bend it sufficiently to ensure you win.
Ah, I see. In my country the party in power will do whatever they can get away with to improve their chances of winning. So we have elections, but they aren't really 'fair'.
There are gradations. Most likely in your country the elections are more real than in Russia.
I'm talking about the reason that ritual even exists, and the effect it has.
Instead of imprisoning people it's more efficient to allow them to imprison themselves.
Some random Russian middle-age school teacher just goes on with their not particularly happy life because 1) they think they should limit themselves and everybody is doing that and 2) they think they've taken an obligation, as imperfect as the process may be.
Medieval monarchs had their subjects swear oaths for a reason, even though the supporting layer would be jails and gallows.
Humans are not rational beings. We do not act on universal principles. We act on instincts.
All this is intended to persuade "subjects" to control themselves and "sheriffs" (which are a crowd too, state apparatus is too big a thing to be attributed conscious goals at ruling a country) to think that their position is safe.
I was very unhappy until I realized this, in many areas of life.
America still operates mostly as a democracy. Excepting a few notable cases elections matter. That's why we had an insurrection: the fascist lost and got angry.
You can argue it's really controlled by special interests but it's still a democracy. Russia doesn't have real elections AND it's controlled by the oligarchs.
The theater of American politics operate under the banner of "democracy", sure, but believing that it is therefore a democracy is simply naive. "Democratic republic" pedantism aside, if it were what it claims to be, several things would've been updated/phased out as obsolete long ago (eg. Electoral College, etc.) and others would not have been allowed to persist (eg. SuperPACs, etc.), but instead, we drink the Kool-Aid like it's a birthright and go about our peasant lives, high on hopium and baseless dreams.
Why did the US suddenly become a part of this discussion?
The US is absolutely a flawed democracy, no doubt about that. However the people's vote in the elections does have a real impact on the political decisions of the country.
The amount of influence the voters have can be debated, but it is far from nothing. Thus the US elections are not purely theaterical, and therefore there is sense in having elections in the US.
Yeah I know it is a theater, that is what I said. What I don't understand is why they keep it up? It seems so pointless, but they still hold "elections". What ie the reason for that?