Asked by :3 [SillyAnonymousCat]
How are democracies and dictatorships different?
(1 point)
Responses
In a democracy, people have a say in government, while in a dictatorship they do not.
In a democracy, people have a say in government, while in a dictatorship they do not.
In a dictatorship, people elect a leader, while in a democracy they elect representatives.
In a dictatorship, people elect a leader, while in a democracy they elect representatives.
In a democracy, people elect their leaders, while in a dictatorship they only elect representatives.
In a democracy, people elect their leaders, while in a dictatorship they only elect representatives.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
In a democracy, people have a say in government, while in a dictatorship they do not.
Explanation: Democracies allow citizens to participate (vote, influence policy, choose leaders); dictatorships concentrate power in one person or small group and deny meaningful public input.
Explanation: Democracies allow citizens to participate (vote, influence policy, choose leaders); dictatorships concentrate power in one person or small group and deny meaningful public input.
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