Reviewing the following Aristotle's tables will reveal some concerns that will be the main focus of the government's attitude towards the development of the US government. The authors argue that government forms around the world have brought about the history that Americans used to build better governance tools. Another idea hidden in the Aristotle government's chart and leading the setters to a more cautious conclusion is that democracy is the only type of government not tried in the world.
The structure of the US government has three levels: the federal government, the state government, and the local government. The federal government supervises the whole of the United States and has three branches. Executive, legislative, and judicial. The legislative body composed of the Senate and the House of Representatives or Congress enact domestic law and the role of executive agencies (president, vice president) is to enforce these laws. The judiciary consists of courts to ensure that governments and citizens comply with the Constitution. But like the King of Saudi Arabia, the President of the United States has the right to grant pardon to criminals and to elect a federal judge. In addition, like the King of Saudi Arabia, the President of the United States has the right to issue orders, but he must obtain consent from the Senate.
Each country acts as head of state, as a symbolic leader of the state, there is a person representing the country. In the US, the president is leading both the government and the head of state, but not in many countries. As head of state, the President oversees the memorial of the hero of war, throws the first time in a baseball game, participates in the funeral and other duties of world leaders.
According to the federal system of the US government, not the unified or federal structure, the state (federal) government has no right to enforce general police authority through the United States Constitution. Each of the fifty federal states in the United States (although lacking full sovereignty called "state" in the United States) holds its own police, military and domestic legislative power. The US Constitution gives the federal government authority to handle diplomatic problems and interstate issues (state problems). Regarding the police, this means that the federal government has no jurisdiction if non-federal crimes are committed in the state of the United States and the fugitive does not escape the state. However, if a fugitive passes through the state, it will violate federal law on interstate flights, subject to federal jurisdiction, and federal law enforcement agencies may be involved.