People, people. Yeesh, I go away to work for a few days and everyone whips out the Kool-Aid.
Arnie played by the rules as he did not run for the presidency... sorry, Arnie had the sense of RIGHT not to run.
Well, it just might be - that pesky Constitution aside, that Reagan's "Big Tent" Republican Party, turned into a religious revival, and there is no way that Arnold was going to win the party nomination, the law aside. He supports gay rights and medical marijuana, doesn't go to church, is married into the Kennedy family and is more socially liberal than Obama is. You think that will win in the current Republican environment?
Not only that, there were issues that didn't rate very much in Cali, but would matter in a national elections like the steroid deal, the 'gay soft core porn' he did (or perhaps it was just an educational film on how to shower), his time as a Big, Huge, Supergreasy Hollywood type show biz star where he acted like a Hollywood type star. We're mature enough here (or jaded - remember he is Gov because the guy before him got recalled for being boring) to not care much about soft core porn, or the fact that he was banging starlets like Brett Farve throws passes. On a national stage, within the Republican party, I'd be about as likely to get the nod.
I don't do "rules." I do "right" and "wrong."
But the USA does not do right and wrong, but rather - as you should have learned in like high school civics - "We are a nation of laws." There is no notion of right and wrong (or god) in the Constitution).
Is it the goal of the Democrat party to lie and cheat to win elections?
No more than the Republicans who do the same.
I disagree slightly with the notion that our country was founded on the Constitution -- it was founded on the Declaration of Independence,
F. 100% dead wrong. The DoI was about independence from British, and said little to nothing about government - other to note, at length, that any government run by George III sucked. Nor, was the Constitution the way to enshrine those ideals. Hell, it wasn't even the first government was it? No, that would have been the Articles of Confederation. So, basically the Constitution is, in and of itself, an amendment to a previous system of American government.
The Constitution is a document set up to enforce these principles
Oops, not even close, but thanks for playing our game. Where the DoI stated, as you correctly said, it was all about life, liberty and happiness, (which of course is in the original, "life, liberty, and property" and not happiness, but you knew that didn't you) the Constitution says that We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America. It is, in fact, mostly a commercial document, its really about trade, money, standards, and business. Because, the business of America is business after all, and 'twas ever thus. It sought a very small, very limited federal government to work with very powerful states over commercial issues. I would suggest, the basic text for all understanding of the American Constitution, Charles Beard's An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution.